A common type with sharp legends has been found in Western Han tombs of 73-33 BC.
By the 1980s, over ten thousand brick-and-stone underground Han tombs had been discovered throughout China.
Doors made completely out of stone were found in many Han tombs as well as tombs in later dynasties.
The vessel was found in a Han tomb in Shanxi, China.
Ceramic architectural models of buildings, like houses and towers, were found in Han tombs, perhaps to provide lodging for the dead in the afterlife.
A common type of ceramic figurine found in Han tombs is a female entertainer sporting long, flowing silk sleeves that are flung about while dancing.
Pottery or wooden figurines of players with model Liubo boards have also been discovered in some Han tombs.
The second section is about the excavation of the Han tomb.
Cast-bronze money trees are a conspicuous feature of Han tombs in Sichuan.
They are from a third-century Han tomb, and nothing about them will ruffle the once-orthodox notion of a fixed, insular, centralized "Chinese" style.