Lot Essay
The Bactrian camel was not indigenous to China, but was imported by the tens of thousands from the states of the Tarim Basin, eastern Turkestan and Mongolia. The Tang state created a special office to oversee the imperial camel herds, which were brought into service for transport and for special military courier missions to the northern frontier. The camel was also employed by the court and merchants, making these animals 'ships of the desert' linking China commercially and culturally to the cities and trade routes of Central Asia, Persia and the Near East.
The two-humped Bactrian camel, known in China from as early as the Han dynasty, was originally brought from Central Asia and Eastern Turkestan as tribute. Its ability to survive the hardships of travel across the Asian deserts was soon recognized and Imperial camel herds were established under the administration of a special Bureau. These Imperial camel herds, numbering in the thousands, were used for a range of state duties, including the provision of a military courier service for the northern frontier. Camels were not only prized for resilience but also for their hair, which was used to produce cloth, admired for its lightness and warmth, and when necessary for their meat and milk during the long treks.
A striding camel of similar size (84 cm. high), also with head raised and mouth opened in a bray, with amber-glazed tufts of hair, in the British Museum, London, is illustrated in Sekai toji zenshu, vol. 11, Tokyo, 1976, p. 148, no. 136. Another camel, laden with a large pack with a monster mask, in the collection of the Idemitsu Museum, is illustrated in Chinese Ceramics in the Idemitsu Collection, Idemitsu Museum, Tokyo, 1987, no. 48. A massive sancai and brown-glazed pottery figure of a Bactrian camel was sold at Christie’s New York, 25 September 2020, lot 1807.