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Jun
ware incense burner
Yuan dynasty
(1271-1368)
Height 42.7 cm, diameter at mouth 25.5 cm
Pair
of gold earrings in the form of makara
Liao dynasty (916-1125)
Height 4 cm, width 3.7 cm

Grey
pottery figure of a foreigner
Yuan dynasty (1271-1368)
Height 26 cm
(Photo
courtesy of University Museum and Art Gallery,
The University of Hong Kong)
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The
Silk Road in Inner Mongolia
15 February to 13
May 2007
The
University Museum and Art Gallery of The University
of Hong Kong and the Inner Mongolia Autonomous
Region Museum are pleased to present the exhibition
"The Silk Road in Inner Mongolia" in
which eighty extraordinary artefacts dating from
the Tang (618-907) to the Yuan (1271-1368) dynasties,
including porcelain, glass, gold and silver wares,
harnesses and Nestorian Christian items will be
on view.
The
steppes in northern China have always been home
to nomads. From the third century BC onwards,
the steppes were dominated by the nomadic tribes
of the Xiongnu, Xianbei, Turks, and Qidan respectively.
They were, however, eventually conquered by Genghis
Khan by 1206. In 1271, Kublai Khan, grandson of
Genghis, became ruler of the empire and adopted
the new Chinese dynastic name of "Yuan".
For millennia, the steppes nomads traded with
people to the west and those who lived on China's
central plains, establishing the "Steppe
Silk Road". This paved the way for extensive
cultural exchanges between East and West.
The
Steppe Silk Road is generally used to mean the
road crossing the Eurasian steppes which began
in Central Asia and eastern Europe in the west,
reaching Mongolia and Siberia in the north to
the central plains in the south. Around the first
century, the northern Xiongnu migrated to the
west and this marked the beginnings of the Steppe
Silk Road. In the early sixth century, the Turks
established the Turkic empire (552-745) and opened
up a trade route to Rome. Tight contacts were
established between the Turks and Persia, Sogdia
and Byzantia. Exhibits include gold and silver
Persian wares and a gold Roman coin excavated
from Inner Mongolia. During the Tang dynasty (618-907),
contact between East and West grew tremendously
and Nestorian Christianity was introduced to China
in 635. In 845, when Emperor Wuzong suppressed
Buddhism, Nestorian Christianity also suffered
almost disappearing in the central plains. During
the Yuan dynasty, Nestorian Christianity experienced
a revival. A Nestorian Christian porcelain plaque
included in the exhibition, dating to the Mongolian
Khanate period, is the only Nestorian plaque made
of porcelain known. Towards the end of the Tang
dynasty, the Qidan grew in power and established
the Liao dynasty (916-1125). The production of
ceramics flourished during the Liao dynasty and
representative wares such as cockscomb flasks,
phoenix-head ewers and Liao sancai can be viewed.
The Mongols founded the Yuan dynasty (1271-1368)
and established a vast empire that stretched through
Europe and Asia and thus facilitated travel and
trading. Trade became more efficient and less
dangerous through the northern and southern steppe
routes, and along the postal relay roads, which
enhanced the cultural interaction between East
and West.
The
Silk Road of China's northern steppes documents
the rise and fall of nomadic tribes, and the relationship,
interaction and cultural influences between these
tribes and the West. Their arts are not only characterised
by their own cultural features, but also by blending
the ideas and styles of the West. This illustrates
the cultural diversity and uniqueness of China.

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