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Standing Foot Soldier - Image 1
Standing Foot Soldier - Image 2
Standing Foot Soldier - Image 3
Standing Foot Soldier - Image 4
Public Domain

Standing Foot Soldier

167-134

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Standing Foot Soldier

167-134

Physical Qualities Earthenware with unfired pigments over white slip, 18 3/8 x 6 1/4 x 4 1/8 in. (46.7 x 15.9 x 10.5 cm.)
Credit Line Gift of George and Julianne Alderman, Baltimore
Object Number 2000.337
Warfare was nearly continuous throughout the Western Han dynasty (206 bce–9 ce). Western Han armies were based on the model of infantries accompanied by chariots and cavalry, which had been used by the earlier Qin dynasty (221–206 bce). Following the example of the First Qin Emperor, members of the Western Han elite were accompanied in death by armies of sculpted soldiers, which not only indicated the earthly status of the deceased, but also ensured the tombs’ ongoing protection. The sculpted armies of the Western Han were smaller in number and size than those of the earlier Qin dynasty. They were also less detailed.
The Baltimore Museum of Art by gift, 2000; George and Julianne Alderman, Baltimore; Michael Teller, Williamsburg, Virginia (acquired after 1990)
Frances Klapthor, The Baltimore Museum of Art, "Chinese Mortuary Ceramics from the Collection," December 2008-December 2009.

Explore the Collection Further

Standing Foot Soldier
167–134
Léopold Flameng and Jean-Louis-Ernest Meissonier
Two Foot Soldiers
1850–1887
Georg Andreas Wolfgang I and Johann Heinrich Schönfeld
Soldier Standing by a Cannon
1650–1715
Etienne Delaune
Combat between Men on Horseback and Soldiers on Foot
2000–1555
Etienne Delaune
Combat between Men on Horseback and Soldiers on Foot
2000–1572
Etienne Delaune
Combat between Soldiers on Horse and Soldiers on Foot
1537–1582
Eugène Lami
Croquis par divers artistes: No. 23: Soldiers Charging, Monkey Soldier, Soldier Standing, etc.
1819–1889
Eugène Lami
Croquis par Divers Artistes: no. 23: Soldiers Charging, Monkey Soldier, Soldier Standing, etc.
1819–1889