Porcelain Capital Jingdezhen: Volume I: The Rise of Chinese Ceramic Civilization

$0.00

Porcelain Capital Jingdezhen is a grand historical and cultural chronicle that explores the rise of Chinese ceramic civilization and its profound influence on world culture.

From ancient kilns and imperial porcelain workshops to the Maritime Silk Road and global cultural exchanges, this book presents the story of Jingdezhen — the world-renowned “Porcelain Capital” of China — across centuries of artistic innovation, trade, craftsmanship, and human civilization.

Volume I: The Rise of Chinese Ceramic Civilization traces the origins of Chinese porcelain, the evolution of kiln technologies, the spiritual aesthetics behind ceramic art, and the emergence of Jingdezhen as the center of imperial porcelain production.

Combining history, archaeology, art, economics, and intercultural exchange, this work reveals how porcelain became one of China’s greatest contributions to world civilization.

This series is intended for historians, collectors, ceramic artists, scholars, students, and readers interested in Chinese culture, Asian history, and global artistic heritage.

Porcelain Capital Jingdezhen is a grand historical and cultural chronicle that explores the rise of Chinese ceramic civilization and its profound influence on world culture.

From ancient kilns and imperial porcelain workshops to the Maritime Silk Road and global cultural exchanges, this book presents the story of Jingdezhen — the world-renowned “Porcelain Capital” of China — across centuries of artistic innovation, trade, craftsmanship, and human civilization.

Volume I: The Rise of Chinese Ceramic Civilization traces the origins of Chinese porcelain, the evolution of kiln technologies, the spiritual aesthetics behind ceramic art, and the emergence of Jingdezhen as the center of imperial porcelain production.

Combining history, archaeology, art, economics, and intercultural exchange, this work reveals how porcelain became one of China’s greatest contributions to world civilization.

This series is intended for historians, collectors, ceramic artists, scholars, students, and readers interested in Chinese culture, Asian history, and global artistic heritage.