注意:参拍此件拍品需单独缴纳3万元人民币的保证金! H.: 47 cm? ? Provenance: - A French private collection.- Nagel, Salzburg, June 16, 2017, lot 338. (Link) (Sold EUR 86.450)? Ref.:- Enlightening Elegance, Imperial Porcelain of the Mid to Late Ming, The Huaihaitang Collection, p. 380, no. 124, for a similar example.- Veritas Auctioneers, Portugal, 6 December, 2011, lot 26, for a second example of this vase with numerous baking flaws, lacking the upper section. (Link) (sold EUR 36.000) - Christie's, New York, 7-8 March, 2006, lot 301, for a third example of this vase, lacking the upper section. (Link) (sold USD 13.200) - Christie's, London, 11 May, 2015, lot 12, for a large Wanli mark and period meiping vase with phoenixes. (Link) (sold GBP 146.500) - Sotheby's, 13 May, 2015, lot 118, for a large Wanli mark and period meiping vase with dragons. (Link) (sold GBP 389.000) - Christie's, New York, 16 November, 1998, for another Wanli mark and period meiping vase from the collection of former American president Herbert Hoover. (Link) (sold GBP 28.750)? A meiping (Chinese: 梅瓶, literally: 'plum vase') is a type of vase traditionally used to display branches of plum blossoms. The meiping was first made of stoneware during the Tang dynasty (618-907). It was originally used as a wine vessel, but since the Song dynasty (960-1279) it also became popular as a plum vase and got its name 'meiping'. It is tall, with a narrow base spreading gracefully into a wide body, followed by a sharply-rounded shoulder, a short and narrow neck, and a small opening.