South China Carvings Collected into Museum

Over 120 stone carvings dating back to the Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279 AD), which have been scattered in mountains and valleys or collected as showpieces in people's homes, were recently collected and put on display in a museum in Ningbo, east China's Zhejiang Province.

The stone carvings, shaped as either animals or people of official rank, belonged to a prominent family surnamed Shi, whose offspring commissioned the pieces as burial ornaments.

Experts pointed out that that the carvings are as delicate and meticulously-carved as the world-renowned terra-cotta warriors in Xi'an.

The collection was made by Yang Gucheng, a renowned local archaeologist.






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