This globular jar with two tiny lugs on the shoulder has a heavily crazed celadon glaze. Wares such as this are one of the many utensils produced from the Longquan kilns of the Southern Song (1127-1279) dynasty.Thickly-glazed celadons (a generic European term for ceramics with green, iron-based glazes) such as this, were mass-produced and widely exported from the Southern Song to the early Ming period. Chinese celadons have made their way to Southeast Asia, Japan and even Egypt. They were also used domestically sometimes as tea-drinking vessels. The glaze chemistry and firing conditions determined the colour of the celadon glaze, which ranged from bluish-green to olive-green. The finest Longquan celadons were highly prized for their smooth and lustrous glazes that resembled polished jade.