[268] See Burlington Magazine, November, 1909, Plate iv., opp. p. 83.
[269] See Mrs. Williams, loc. cit., p. 33.
[270] The modern Yü Chou. See vol. ii., p. 107.
[271] Op. cit., Plate 1.
[272] By Mr. A.W. Bahr.
[273] The name Ma is supposed to be that of a potter, but the statement is based on oral tradition only. The character used is ma (horse).
[274] It was deposited in the FitzWilliam Museum by Mr. W.H. Caulfield in 1896.
[276] The Li t´a k´an k´ao ku ou pien, of which the British Museum possesses a copy dated 1877.