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The
Origin of Zi Sha Making
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Zi Sha is a
type of special pottery in China. It has the color of
purple, usually purplish-red. The Zi Sha pottery is stronger
and thinner than other potteries and used to make exquisite
equipment. The fine Zi Sha potteries can be very valuable in
the market.
It has long been believed that the earliest Zi Sha masters
were a monk in the Jinsha Temple in the Yixing City and his
succession Gong Chun in the mid Ming Dynasty (1368-1644).
However, a few Zi Sha pottery pieces have been excavated
from other archeological sites which can be traced back to
as early as the stone age. In the Song Dynasty (960-1279) Zi
Sha had been used for the equipment in the daily life.
However, before the Ming Dynasty, Zi Sha had not became a
popular material for the pottery industry, the Jinsha Monk
and Gong Chun were the first two craftsmen who changed Zi
Sha making as an artwork. Zi Sha had been widely accepted by
the Chinese people after them.
Zi Sha is used mostly as the material for tea equipment.
Most excavated Zi Sha potteries are tea pots or cups,
probably because the Ming Dynasty was also a milestone of
the Chinese tea history. Also the Zi Sha is only a thin
layer of pottery without any glaze, it is a good thermal
insulator. By using the Zi Sha containers, the hot tea is
easier to keep warm in the winter and will not hurt the
drinker's hand. It can keep the original flavor of the tea
for several days without changing the tea's color and taste.
Zi Sha and tea has became a perfect match since the Ming
Dynasty. It is now a major material of tea equipment besides
porcelain in China.
The Jinsha Monk and Gong Chun lived in the Hongzhi and
Zhengde Era (1488-1521) of the Ming Dynasty. This was the
most stable and prosperous time of the Ming Dynasty. The
Jinsha Monk used to work with pottery makers. He tried to
get rid of all the impurities from lots of clay, at last he
collected some little fine and purplish sticky part, then he
made a tea pot with this purified clay. Surprisingly the tea
pot was as strong as metal and stone, when he knocked at the
pot by his fingers he heard a ring bell-like sound. It was
extremely good to reserve tea with this pot. Soon after his
skill became famous at the time and he developed a whole set
of procedure to purify the clay and make pottery pots. Since
the pottery was a little hoarse like very find sands and had
a purple color, people called this material Zi Sha (the
purple sand) pottery. The Jinsha Monk and Gong Chun both
lived in the city of Yixing, where the purple clay is fine
and rich. Yixing is also called the capital of Zi .Sha
Later the Jinsha Monk taught his secret to another tea pot
maker Gong Chun. Gong Chun was very good at designing tea
pots. His tea pots were vivid, simple and elegant. Some of
his products were well kept till today. After the Jinsha
Monk and Gong Chun, the Zi Sha technique was mature and Zi
Sha makers became well-known and respected.
Background
Knowledge:
History of China
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