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Page:Brinkley - China - Volume 1.djvu/450

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INDEX

Hei-ti-wu-tsai, 218.

Heu-chi, potter, 357.

Hia-moh-yao, 136.

Hiai-chia-ts'ing monochromatic ware, 322.

Hiang Pu-sun, potter-poet, 361.

Hing-yao, 15.

Hirth, Friedrich, on Chinese keramics, 8, 11.

Ho Chou, potter, 13.

Ho Chung-chu, potter, 15.

Ho Kuei-lin, potter, 13.

Ho-yao, 15, 90.

Honan province, imperial ware, 37; Jung ware, 41; Chün ware, 51.

Hsiang Yuan-p'ien, work on keramics, 23.

Hsien-hung. See Chi-hung.

Hsin-Ting-yao, 27.

Hsuan-tê era, soft-paste blue-and-white porcelain, 106—109; quality of the blue used, 109; hard-paste blue-and-white porcelain, 111; specimens of blue-and-white ware, 113; use of red under the glaze, 127; development of enamelled decoration, 183—185; red monochromatic porcelain, 280—283.

Hu-kung, potter, imitations of Kuan and Ko wares, 77; enamelled ware, 200.

Hu-tien-yao, 91, 303.

Hü-yin, potter, 361.

Hung-chih era, blue-and-white ware, 120; enamelled porcelain, 192; yellow monochromes, 304.

Hung-mien monochromatic porcelain, 298.

Hung-wu era, blue-and-white ware, 104.

Hwang-tien-pan ware, 307.

Hwui Mang-ch'an, potter, 362.

Ibn Batuta on Chinese porcelain, 68, 367.

Identification, of Lung-Chuan ware, 43, 47—49; marks on Chün ware, 53, 57; of Sung, Ming, and Tsing céladons, 80—83; year-marks unreliable, 98; criteria for blue-and-white ware, 104; of early soft-paste blue-and-white ware, 117; of hard-paste Ming blue-and-white ware, 119, 126, 127, 135; of potters impossible, 136; temporary cessation of year-marks, 144; of Kang-hsi egg-shell blue-and-white ware, 147; of Chien-Lung era blue-and-white ware, 174; of Chinese and Japanese Famille Chrysanthémo-Pæonéenne porcelains, 206—208; of modern and European imitations, 238—243, 378—382.

Imperial ware. See Kuan-yao.

Indian ink decoration, 223.

Iridescence in enamels, 216.

"Iron base," characteristic of Sung dynasty céladons, 34, 37, 40, 41, 43, 44, 47, 49, 81.

Ivory-white porcelain, 271—273; modelled, 272, 274; modern, 273; esteem, 273—275.

Jacquemart, Albert, researches in Chinese keramics, 4; on origin of old céladons, 62; his "families" of enamelled ware, 190, 205, 210; on process in transmutation ware, 331.

Japan, keramic trade with China, 29, 73; appreciation of Chinese wares, 58; specimens of Chinese céladons preserved in, 73—76; Chinese keramic influence, 200; porcelains confused with Chinese, 373; as an imitator of old Chinese porcelain, 381.

Jewelled porcelain, 245.

Ju-yao, origin, character, 33—36, 40; metal rings, 36; mark, 37; imitations, 76, 83.

Jujube red, monochromatic porcelain, 299; use in combination, 299.


420