摘要
During September 1999, the Nanjing Municipal Museum excavated a front-and- hack chambered brick-structured tomb in Guojiashan. The material remains recovered comprise mainly of pottery and a small number of porcelain. The locality of the tomb is also known as Xiangshan, which was the family graveyard of the Wangs during the eastern Jin times. Bricks with "wang" insignia were recovered in the cemetery. The style of the material remains and tomb structure indicate that tomb 8 was an East Wu feature.
During September 1999, the Nanjing Municipal Museum excavated a front-and- hack chambered brick-structured tomb in Guojiashan. The material remains recovered comprise mainly of pottery and a small number of porcelain. The locality of the tomb is also known as Xiangshan, which was the family graveyard of the Wangs during the eastern Jin times. Bricks with 'wang' insignia were recovered in the cemetery. The style of the material remains and tomb structure indicate that tomb 8 was an East Wu feature.
出处
《华夏考古》
CSSCI
2001年第1期25-28,49,共5页
Huaxia Archaeology