Painted ceramic statues of Chinese cavalrymen and infantrymen from the Western Han Dynasty (202 BC - 9 AD), now located at the Hainan Provincial Museum.
Western-Han miniature pottery infantry (foreground) and cavalry (background); in 1990, when the tomb complex of Emperor Jing of Han (r. 157–141 BC) and his wife Empress Wang Zhi (d. 126 BC) was excavated north of Yangling, over 40,000 miniature pottery figures were unearthed. All of them were one-third life size, smaller than the 8,000-some fully life size soldiers of the Terracotta Army buried alongside the First Emperor of Qin. Smaller miniature figurines, on average 60 centimeters (24 in) in height, have also been found in various royal Han tombs where they were placed to guard the deceased tomb occupants in their afterlife.
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{{Information |Description=Painted ceramic statues of Chinese cavalrymen and infantrymen from the Western Han Dynasty (202 BC - 9 AD), now located at the Hainan Provincial Museum. |Source=[http://www.flickr.com/photos/drs2biz/3441734200/in/set-72157616582
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