1. Bought from Seaouke Yue [You Xiaoxi] 游筱溪, of Shanghai 上海, in New York. Said to have been excavated at Huang ling [Huanglin] 皇林, Hsia ki [Xiaxi] 下溪, Chekiang [Zhejiang] 浙江. For price, see Original Miscellaneous List, p. 234. $150.
2. (Undated Folder Sheet note) Original attribution: Chinese. Hsia [Xia] 夏. See further, S.I. 1051, Appendix VIII.
3. (Isabel Ingram Mayer, 1945) Chou [Zhou] 周 dynasty.
4. (Thomas Lawton, 1978) Attribution changed from Chou [Zhou] 周 to Shang 商.
5. (Stephen Allee per Keith Wilson, February 5, 2008) On this date entered: Period One (Late Neolithic period), Date (ca. 5000--ca. 1700 BCE), Artist (Liangzhu 良渚 culture), Title, Object name, Geographical region (Lake Tai 太湖 region); plus Description per Jenny F. So and Dimensions per Christine Lee, from Jade Project Database.
6. (Jeffrey Smith per Keith Wilson, July 17, 2008) Ceremonial Objects added as secondary classification.
7. (Jeffrey Smith, April 12, 2016) Transferred from Description: (Jenny So, from Jade Project Database) Coarse inhomogeneous texture, mottled lime-yellow and pale green, with dark brown and whitish altered veins. Biconical hole, off-center, ridge ground smooth. Evenly round, unevenly thick.
(File folder) Perforated disc of the type "bi." Bored obliquely from both sides. Mottled tones of yellow and pale green, yellow predominating on one surface, green on the other with scattered dark brown veinings; areas of white incipient disintegration, more pronounced on the yellow side. (Rim has old smooth chips.) Box. Neg. No. 375B4.
The information presented on this website may be revised and updated at any time as ongoing research progresses or as otherwise warranted. Pending any such revisions and updates, information on this site may be incomplete or inaccurate or may contain typographical errors. Neither the Smithsonian nor its regents, officers, employees, or agents make any representations about the accuracy, reliability, completeness, or timeliness of the information on the site. Use this site and the information provided on it subject to your own judgment. The National Museum of Asian Art welcomes information that would augment or clarify the ownership history of objects in their collections..