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Gold Bricks Naturally not made of real gold, they are so-called because, when knocked, they produce a metallic sound .Another explanation for the name is that they were officially called during the Ming and the Qing dynasties jingzhuan (capital bricks) because bricks of this quality were meant only for the imperial house in the capital, In time jingzhuan came to be known as jinzhuan or gold bricks. Whatever the reason for the unusual name, they did involve great costs and difficult skills to make and in theirs sense, the name might not be a great exaggeration. The area around Suzhou used to be the home of these ¡°gold bricks¡± .Lying close to Grand Canal, it abounds in a kind of fine clay most suitable as the material for compact bricks. To make those meant for the palace buildings, a strict procedure of manufacture must be adhered to. It included selecting the clay, purging, setting, molding ,drying in the shade and , finally ,firing in the kiln . This last process was the most complicated one. According to The Illustrated Book on the Selection of Bricks, a Ming Dynasty (1368-1644)work ,(The unburnt bricks) after being put in the kiln, are smoked with smoldering husks for a month, burnt with fire-wood chips for another month, with twigs for a third month and with pine branches for yet another 40 days ¨Ctotaling 130 days ¨Cbefore they are left to cool down and taken out of the kiln .The cost of a ¡°gold brick¡± made this way was 0.96 tales of silver ,enough to buy in those days one dan of rice. Another source say that , during the reign of the Ming emperor Jiajing, three years were spent to produce 50,000 bricks per day .All finished ¡°gold bricks ¡± were shipped to the capital by the Hangzhou-Beijing Grand Canal. The laying of the bricks, like their manufacture, must follow strict prescriptions. A bricklayer assisted by two helpers could only lay five in a day. Every piece must be ground and polished on site in such a way that, when paved, they fitted perfectly with other pieces, leaving no crevices. The bricks must also be soaked with raw tung oil so that they became lustrously dark like black jade. Worn by several hundred years of time and trodden during the last decades by millions upon millions of sightseers, these bricks have largely remained intact, thanks to their rock-like hardness .Now they are from time to time mopped with a kind of high-quality vegetable oil to get a new layer of protection.
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