◇ Exhibition time:Permanent exhibition
◇ Exhibition venue:Xuzhou Han Dynasty Stone Art Museum
The "Han Stone Relics" exhibition, located in the North Hall, displays more than 160 stone reliefs, which are respectively displayed in seven exhibition rooms and 206-meter gallery. The exhibits are mainly collections of cultural relics from the end of the Qing Dynasty in 1989, including stone reliefs unearthed from Han tombs such as Tongshan Honglou Ancestral Hall, Miaoshan Han Tomb, Liguo Han Tomb, Peixian Qishan Han Tomb, Suining Jiunvdun, as well as scattered stone reliefs at different historical stages of the Qing Dynasty, the Republic of China, and New China, as well as Han stone reliefs collected inside and outside Xuzhou.
The first exhibition room mainly displays the Han stone reliefs unearthed from the Miaoshan Han Tomb in Tongshan. The tomb was cleared and excavated in 1956. The tomb chamber was in the Eastern Han Dynasty. The structure was the front hall and the back room, all of which were made of bluestone. A total of 9 Han stone reliefs were unearthed, including music and dance, cooking and banquet, martial arts and music, the ascension of the Yan Emperor, and the ascension of the Yellow Emperor.
The second exhibition room is mainly restored to display the tomb of Fan Shan stone coffin in Liuxin Township, Tongshan, and the tomb of Qi Shan stone coffin in Peixian County, which were in the late Western Han Dynasty and Wang Mang period respectively.
The third exhibition room mainly displays the "textile map", "living and working in peace and contentment map" and other Han stone reliefs unearthed by Jia Wang;
The fourth exhibition room mainly displays the stone reliefs unearthed from the Honglou Temple in Tongshan and the Han Tomb in Liguo;
The fifth exhibition room displays the Han stone reliefs of the late Eastern Han Dynasty, such as the "Surabaya taking the tripod" and "Nuo dance";
The sixth exhibition room displays the Han stone reliefs unearthed from Suining Jiunvdun Han Tomb;
The seventh exhibition room displays the Han stone reliefs collected by Mr. Zhang Boying and donated by his descendants.