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Conghua, do you want Gaiwa's boss?

Boss, does the roof tile need manpower? In that case, you can go to the same city as 58. Because there seems to be such a job in 58 cities.

These small tiles can be used as antique buildings, but also have their own characteristics. For example, paving the road in the yard can not only make patterns, but also save materials. It is very beautiful and kills two birds with one stone.

The colors of tiles are mainly brick red and gray. When applied to buildings, ceramic tiles are not only heat-insulating and rain-proof, but also beautiful, neat and durable. In ancient times, ceramic tiles were all made of clay plates. Their manufacturing method is to first make a round ceramic blank with a clay plate, then cut the blank tube into four or six tiles, then cut it into tube tiles, and then fire it in a kiln. Tiles are uneven in thickness, with handprints on the reverse side and rough and messy rope patterns on the surface.

Where did the tiles come from?

China made ceramic tiles in the early Western Zhou Dynasty in BC 1 1 century. The earliest bricks appeared in the tombs of the Warring States Period from the 5th century BC to the 3rd century BC.

Qin Zhuan Hanwa

The firing and use of building pottery in China began in the early Shang Dynasty, and the earliest building pottery was clay pipe. In the early years of the Western Zhou Dynasty, architectural pottery such as slab tile and pipe tile was innovated. Qin Shihuang unified China in the Qin Dynasty, ending the scuffle between princes. Various regions and ethnic groups have extensive exchanges, and the economy and culture of the Chinese nation have developed rapidly.

In the Han Dynasty, social productive forces advanced by leaps and bounds, and the progress of handicraft industry advanced by leaps and bounds. Therefore, the production scale, firing technology, quantity and quality of pottery industry in Qin and Han dynasties exceeded any previous era. During the Qin and Han Dynasties, architectural pottery occupied an important position in the pottery industry, among which the most distinctive ones were portrait bricks and tiles with various decorative patterns, which were called "Qin bricks and Han tiles".