| What is Porcelain?
The generally
accepted definition of porcelain is that of a white, vitrified,
translucent ceramic, fired to a temperature of at least 1280
centigrade. The body of most Chinese porcelain is made from a
mixture of white China clay (kaolin) and porcelain stone (dunzi, a
feldspathic rock); the latter being ground to powder and mixed with
the clay.
The body and
glaze are usually fired together in a reducing atmosphere at a
temperature between 1200 and 1300 centigrade in a single firing,
forming an integrated body/glaze layer. During the firing the
petuntse vitrified, while the refractory clay ensured that the
vessel retained its shape.
The Chinese
definition of porcelain (tzu) resembles the Western definition of
"Stoneware", besides having as a key feature that it should ring
when struck. White ceramic pieces made from Kaolin clay and fired at
a temperature of over 1000 degree and with a thin layer of green
glaze on the surface had already appeared in the Shang Dynasty (16th
century -11th century B.C.).
White and
translucent porcelain with under-glaze blue and white decoration was
not made before the Yuan dynasty (AD 1279-1368). The secret of true
hard porcelain similar to that of China was not discovered in the
West until about 1707 in
Saxony by Ehrenfried Walter von Tschirnhaus, assisted by the alchemist Johann
Friedrich Böttger.
Porcelain of Jingdezhen
Jingdezhen, formerly spelt Ching The
Chen and known as the "Ceramics Metropolis" of China, is a synonym
for Chinese porcelain. Variably called Xinping or Changnanzhen in
history, it is situated in the northeastern part of Jiangxi province
in a small basin rich in fine kaolin, hemmed in by mountains which
keep it supplied with firewood from their conifers. People there
began to produce ceramics as early as 1,800 years ago in the Eastern
Han Dynasty.
In the Jingde Period(1004-1007),
emperor Zhenzong of Song Dynasty decreed that Changnanzhen should
produce the porcelain used by the imperial court, with each
inscribed at the bottom "made in the reign of Jingde.: From then on
people began to call all chinaware bearing such in inscriptions
"porcelain of Jingdezhen".
The ceramic industry experienced
further development at Jingdezhen during the Ming and Qing dynasties
or from the 14th to the 19th century, when skills became perfected
and the general quality more refined; government kilns were set up
to cater exclusively to the need of the imperial house. The leading
center of the porcelain industry, Jingdezhen has been put under
state protection also as an important historical city. With 133
ancient buildings and cultural sites, it is a tourist town
attracting large numbers of visitors from home and abroad.
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