A VERY RARE GROUP OF FOURTEEN GILT-BRONZE GLASS-INSET BELT ORNAMENTS
A VERY RARE GROUP OF FOURTEEN GILT-BRONZE GLASS-INSET BELT ORNAMENTS
A VERY RARE GROUP OF FOURTEEN GILT-BRONZE GLASS-INSET BELT ORNAMENTS
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PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE MASSACHUSETTS COLLECTION
A VERY RARE GROUP OF FOURTEEN GILT-BRONZE GLASS-INSET BELT ORNAMENTS

TANG-LIAO DYNASTY (AD 618-1125)

Details
A VERY RARE GROUP OF FOURTEEN GILT-BRONZE GLASS-INSET BELT ORNAMENTS
TANG-LIAO DYNASTY (AD 618-1125)
The group comprises twelve belt plaques decorated on one side with a phoenix and on the other side in openwork with a scrolling floral pattern revealing the glass interior. One end-piece has a vertical hole, and the other end-piece is decorated with a scaly dragon and set on the reverse with a glass attachment loop.
The twelve plaques 1 7/8 in. (4.8 cm.) wide, each
Provenance
Acquired in Pennsylvania, 16 June 1988.

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Olivia Hamilton
Olivia Hamilton

Lot Essay

Belt ornaments were a highly important part of attire in ancient China as it revealed the person’s rank and status. Under Tang dynasty sumptuary laws and dress regulations, the number of belt plaques related directly to the rank of the wearer. In the Liao dynasty, clothing and accessories related very closely stylistically to those in the Tang dynasty because Tang dynasty sumptuary laws and dress regulations were adopted, and the tradition of high-ranking figures wearing elaborate belt ornaments continued. A similar gilt-silver belt set decorated with floral and phoenix designs is illustrated by J. White and E. Bunker in Adornment for Eternity: Status and Rank in Chinese Ornament, Denver, 1994, p. 166, no. 78. White and Bunker state that this belt set might have belonged to a woman because it is decorated with phoenix, an image associate with the empress. Compare, also, a set of gilt-silver belt ornaments dated to the Liao dynasty, but decorated with lions, illustrated by E. C. Bunker, J. M. White and J. F. So in Adornment for the Body and Soul: Ancient Chinese Ornaments from the Mengdiexuan Collection, 1999, p. 231, no. 99.

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