After pottery specialist Dr. Anna de Vincen confirmed ... bringing the inscription to an intriguing light. 16th-century Ming Dynasty bowl in the middle of 1,500-year-old artifacts The Israel ...
The colorful porcelain bowl fragment is thought to date from 1520 to 1570 and appears to have originated in China's Ming dynasty. The Ming dynasty—lasting from A.D. 1368 to 1644—ruled China ...
and the German Protestant Institute of Archaeology unearthed a fragment of a Chinese blue and white porcelain bowl dating to 1520–70, during the Ming Dynasty, with Mandarin characters inscribed ...
It is the first bowl found in Israel to contain a Chinese inscription, though other ancient Chinese pottery has been found. "According to Ming Dynasty annals, about 20 official Ottoman delegations ...
The porcelain bowl fragment likely arrived in Jerusalem due to developing trade between the Ottoman Empire and the imperial Ming Dynasty of China, the researchers said. During the early 16th ...
A 1,000-year-old bowl from China's Song Dynasty has sold at auction in Hong Kong for almost US$38m (£28m) - a record for Chinese porcelain ... set in 2014 by a Ming Dynasty wine cup, which ...
A fragment of a porcelain bowl was found on Mount Zion during an ... It dates back to 1520-1570 and originated in the Ming Dynasty, according to the experts. The researchers said ancient Chinese ...
Two brothers accused of stealing Ming dynasty porcelain worth $3.58m (£2.87m ... Museum of Far Eastern Art in Geneva. Two bowls and a vase from the Chinese Ming dynasty (1368-1644) were taken ...
According to the IAA, the porcelain bowl dates back to the 16th century ... The bowl, which was likely produced during the Ming Dynasty between 1520 and 1570, is emblematic of the trade relations ...
though other ancient Chinese pottery has been found. The bowl was likely produced during the Ming Dynasty between 1520 and 1570. "According to Ming Dynasty annals, about 20 official Ottoman ...