1, Yuezhou kiln
Commonly known as "Yue Kiln". The address is in Shaoxing, Shangyu, Cixi and Yuyao in Zhejiang Province today. Because the Tang Dynasty was under the jurisdiction of Yuezhou, it was called Yuezhou Kiln, or Yueyao for short. Gu Yue is not only the birthplace of China celadon, but also the birthplace of China porcelain.
The history of firing porcelain in Yue Kiln is very long. As early as the Eastern Han Dynasty, Yuezhou people fired mature porcelain. After the vigorous development of the Six Dynasties, Sui and Tang Dynasties and Five Dynasties, it never stopped in the Song Dynasty. Celadon from Yue Kiln occupies an important position in the history of China ceramics.
Celadon of Yue Kiln is a treasure of ancient porcelain in China, and it has a very lofty position in the history of China ceramics development.
2. Xingzhou Kiln
Xingzhou Kiln, also known as Xing Kiln, is located in Neiqiu County and Lincheng County, which belong to Xingtai City, Hebei Province. The Tang Dynasty belonged to Xingzhou, so it was called "Xing Kiln". Porcelain was fired in the Tang Dynasty, and Yao Xing is rich in white porcelain, which is the product of China Tang porcelain kiln.
It is the same as the celadon produced by the famous Yue kiln in the same generation. In the Tang Dynasty, China's porcelain appeared a situation of "blue in the south and white in the north". The production of white porcelain in Yao Xing began in the Sui Dynasty and further developed after entering the Tang Dynasty. By the middle and late Tang Dynasty, it had formed its own system, and it could be equally divided with Yue kiln celadon.
3. Dingzhou kiln
Experts infer from its thin embryo, positive glaze color and exquisite carving that this kiln may surpass Yaozhou kiln in Tongchuan, Shaanxi Province. The existence of suspected Han bricks may prove that this kiln is earlier than the famous Yaozhou kiln.
Although it may have been buried for 1000 years, its color is still bright. A large number of ceramic fragments and broken ceramic utensils were also found in the accumulation layer, and the kiln age was suspected to span several generations such as Han, Tang, Song and Yuan Dynasties.
4. Wuzhou kiln
Wuzhou Kiln, located in Jinhua, Zhejiang Province, has been found in Jinhua, Lanxi, Yiwu, Dongyang, Yongkang, Wuyi, Quzhou and Jiangshan.
5. Yue Zhouyao
Mr. Zhou, a member of China Collectors' Association and a collector in Changde, Hunan Province, recorded that his name first appeared in Lu Yu's Four Instruments of Tea Classics in the Tang Dynasty.
In the Tea Classic written by Lu Yu in Tang Dynasty, Yue Zhouyao was listed as the fourth famous celadon kiln. The kiln site is located in Chengguan, Xiangyin County, Hunan Province, and is called Xiangyin Kiln. China's kiln name came from the Tang Dynasty, and Xiangyin was under the jurisdiction of Yuezhou in the Tang Dynasty, so it was called Yue Zhouyao in the Tang Dynasty. Yue Zhouyao began in the Eastern Han Dynasty and went through the Western Jin Dynasty, the Southern Dynasties and the Sui Dynasty, and continued until the Tang Dynasty.
6. Shouzhou Kiln
Shouzhou Kiln is one of the famous porcelain kilns in Sui and Tang Dynasties. The products are famous for celadon. The kiln site is located in Shangyao Town, Guanjiagang, Yujiagou and Waiyao, Huainan City, Anhui Province. The Tang Dynasty belonged to Shouzhou, hence its name.
* * * Found 6 kiln sites in Sui and Tang Dynasties. Burning began in Sui Dynasty, flourished in Tang Dynasty and ended in late Tang Dynasty. Celadon was burned in the Sui Dynasty, and the products included small mouth plates, four series bottles, high-legged plates and so on.
7. Hongzhou kiln
Hongzhou Kiln is a treasure of the firing technology of Han ceramics, and it belongs to one of the six famous celadon kilns in Tang Dynasty. It pays attention to decoration and prints many flowers and patterns, which are arranged symmetrically along the peripheral wall of the object.
The kiln site is located in Hongzhou (now Fengcheng, Jiangxi), so it is called Hongzhou kiln. The discovered kiln sites are mainly located in fengcheng city, Jiangxi, 30 kilometers away from the southern suburbs of Nanchang, and there are also kiln sites in Shang Gang Township, Nanchang County.
Hongzhou kiln began in the late Eastern Han Dynasty and ended in the Five Dynasties. Mainly burned celadon, the glaze color is generally light, bluish yellow; Dark brown; There is also yellow-brown glazed porcelain, the matrix processing is not fine, which conforms to Lu Yu's tea classics: "Hongzhou Porcelain Brown". There is also a blue-green glazed porcelain, which is dark in color and bright in gray-blue.
Baidu Encyclopedia-Seven Porcelain Kilns in Tang Dynasty