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Source Description
This pottery <em>li</em> tripod—which was originally used as a cooking vessel—belongs to the lower stratum of the Xiajiadian culture that flourished in northeast China. Comparable examples with similar shape and proportion have been excavated in Inner Mongolia. <br> <br>A ceramic shape invented and borrowed from central China, li tripod appeared at a later date in the northeast, with limited examples from the late Neolithic period. As an artifact representative of the lower Xiajiadian culture—which was contemporary with the Shang dynasty in central China where bronze production had already been highly developed—pottery li tripod was popular in the northeast during the Bronze Age and was widely spread from the Liaodong to the Liaoxi regions, including Inner Mongolia.
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
163794
label
Li, Hollow-Legged Tripod
core
obj
dtoType
object
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
163794
contentType
object
title
Li, Hollow-Legged Tripod
description
This pottery <em>li</em> tripod—which was originally used as a cooking vessel—belongs to the lower stratum of the Xiajiadian culture that flourished in northeast China. Comparable examples with similar shape and proportion have been excavated in Inner Mongolia. <br> <br>A ceramic shape invented and borrowed from central China, li tripod appeared at a later date in the northeast, with limited examples from the late Neolithic period. As an artifact representative of the lower Xiajiadian culture—which was contemporary with the Shang dynasty in central China where bronze production had already been highly developed—pottery li tripod was popular in the northeast during the Bronze Age and was widely spread from the Liaodong to the Liaoxi regions, including Inner Mongolia.
date
1200–800 BCE
citation
rights
CC0
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
wikidata
Q79990424
genreSpecific
Ceramic
imageCount
1
source
import
dimensionsRaw
Overall: 22.9 x 17 cm (9 x 6 11/16 in.)
cul
China, Inner Mongolia, lower stratum of the Xiajiadian culture (2200–1600 BCE)
accession
2005.2
Source extras
tec
dark gray earthenware
tombstone
Li, Hollow-Legged Tripod, 1200–800 BCE. China, Inner Mongolia, lower stratum of the Xiajiadian culture (2200–1600 BCE). Dark gray earthenware; overall: 22.9 x 17 cm (9 x 6 11/16 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas French, 2005.20
collection
China - Neolithic
didYouKnow
This vessel not only reveals an interesting relationship between ceramic and bronze shapes but also the cultural impact of central China on the border regions.
creditline
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas French
updatedAt
2026-05-29 08:30:55.525000
sourceId
163794
dept
Chinese Art
coll
China - Neolithic
med
dark gray earthenware
thumbnail_url
image_url
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
bdef626180459c7f