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cong

Cong, also written cong (Chinese: 琮), is a type of ancient Chinese jade artifact associated with the Neolithic Liangzhu culture in the Yangtze River delta. Most cong are hollow tubes with a circular inner hole surrounded by a square or rectangular outer profile, producing a characteristic circular-inside-square geometry. They are typically crafted from nephrite or other jade and finished with a highly polished surface. Many examples display incised or drilled decorative motifs along the exterior, including geometric bands and sometimes stylized ancestral or ritual patterns.

Dating and locale place cong in the Liangzhu period, roughly 3400 to 2250 BCE. They are predominantly

Interpretation of cong’s symbolism remains a topic of discussion. A common view is that the cong embodies

Today, cong are key artifacts for understanding early Chinese jade craftsmanship, ritual life, and the social

found
in
graves
and
ritual
contexts
at
Liangzhu
sites
in
eastern
China,
especially
in
the
Zhejiang
and
Jiangsu
regions.
The
small,
portable
forms
and
the
effort
required
to
shape
hard
jade
suggest
they
served
ceremonial
purposes
for
elites,
rather
than
everyday
use.
cosmological
ideas,
with
the
circular
inner
hole
representing
heaven
and
the
square
outer
form
representing
earth,
possibly
reflecting
a
ritual
or
commemorative
function
in
burial
practices.
Cong
are
often
discussed
alongside
other
jade
types
from
the
period,
such
as
bi
discs,
as
indicators
of
elevated
status
and
complex
ritual
belief
systems
in
late
Neolithic
China.
structure
of
the
Liangzhu
culture,
and
are
housed
in
major
museums
worldwide.