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The piece that was damaged was one of the State's first-class celadon-glazed dishes and a masterpiece of Ge kiln porcelain from the Song Dynasty (960-1279). A researcher accidentally smashed it into six pieces after incorrectly operating a testing instrument, according to an investigation conducted by the museum.
According to the Law on the Protection of the Cultural Relics of China, museums should tell cultural authorities of any damage that is inflicted upon grade-one artifacts in their collections. The law,
モンクレール moka, though, does not go so far as to specify how quickly such cases should be reported.
"The repeated occurrence of accidents in the Palace Museum shows that the workers there lack professional qualities," Pan said.
The post soon received thousands of clicks and was forwarded by various media outlets.
In 2008 and 2009, nearly 90 percent of museum employees in China did not have college degrees and very few of them had studied museum-related subjects, according to a survey conducted by Pan. He said the display and daily maintenance of cultural treasures requires specialized knowledge and that people without professional training cannot do the work properly.
Perhaps for that reason,
モンクレール badia, the State Administration of Cultural Heritage has been calling since 2010 for the establishment of a vocational qualification system to be used in finding workers for China's museums.
"In 2006, they destroyed a talisman of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) and in 2008, a Buddha statue," Longcan said in his blog, adding that he got the information from an unnamed insider.
Another rumor recently spread on the Internet held that the Palace Museum bought five rare Song Dynasty letters during an auction in 1997. But in 2005, the five letters showed up again on the auction market and were sold for three times the price they had fetched in 1997.
"And an artwork that had been carried in the armpit of a staff member named Ren Wanping was also smashed. Don't you remember?