What distinctive lacquerware have been unearthed in China?
1978, a wooden lacquer bowl was unearthed in the third cultural layer of Hemudu Neolithic site in Yuyao, Zhejiang Province. It was dug out of a whole piece of wood and painted with vermilion paint. This is the earliest lacquer relic found in China so far. Two pieces of lacquer pottery were also found in Liangzhu cultural sites in tuanjie village and Meinian, Wujiang, Jiangsu. Among them, a black pottery corset pot unearthed in May was first coated with a thin layer of brown paint, and then coated with two sets of twisted silk patterns with thick gold and brown paint. In addition, painted wood lacquerware has also been unearthed in the Neolithic Majiabang cultural site in Xudun, Changzhou, Jiangsu Province, Dadianzi, Aohan Banner, Liaoning Province, and Taosi, Xiangfen, Shanxi Province. Lacquerware in Shang Dynasty and Western Zhou Dynasty was very rare. Red lacquer wooden boxes, red lacquer boxes and dragons were unearthed in the tombs of Erlitou early Shang site in Yanshi, Henan Province. In the early Western Zhou tombs in Pudu Village, Doumen Town, Chang 'an, Shaanxi Province, a circle of lacquer skin around mussels was found. Lacquer beans for car decoration in the late Western Zhou Dynasty unearthed from Doujitai, Baoji, Shaanxi.