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Top Ten Archaeological Discoveries of 2002
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1. The Gexinqiao relics of the Neolithic Age in Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region

 

The Gexinqiao relics of the Neolithic Age, as the only discovery that shed light on the pre-Qin period in the top ten archeology discoveries, came from an historical site in Baise, south China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. The site was believed to be a "factory" during the New Stone Age, where early humans produced stone implements.

 

Scattered at the site are large stones with flat surfaces, which primitive man leaned on and used as chopping blocks. Around the stones were found stone hammers, hatchets and other implements.

 

The “factory”, which remained intact for more than 10,000 years, surpasses other finds from primitive society in China because of its large size and quantity of artifacts.

 

2. Bamboo slips of official documents of the Qin Dynasty (221-207 BC), Liye City, Hunan Province

 

In a well, researchers found, unexpectedly, 36,000 wood and bamboo slips on which more than 200,000 characters were written clearly with brushes, in the ancient lishu (official script) style. The items were found during excavations on the remains of an ancient city which prospered in the Qin Dynasty, in the obscure county of Liye, central China's Hunan Province.

 

The characters on the slips provide an encyclopedic record of the dynasty's political, military and economic situation.

 

They also shed light on the ethnic groups, laws, cultures, postal services, geography and government hierarchies of the period.

 

The well find contained 20 times the number of slips bearing Qin Dynasty records than previous discoveries.

 

The slips escaped the dynasty's early cultural purge because they were official documents instead of "alien" philosophies. They were believed to have been thrown into the well in the war that ended the dynasty.

 

3. Haiqu ancient tomb of the Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD 220) in Rizhao City, Shandong Province

 

More than 90 tombs were found in the Haiqu ancient tombs of the Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD 220) in Rizhao, east China's Shandong Province. Most of them were double coffins or triple coffins or even more. The coffins are all exquisite in black lacquer.

 

 

 

More than 1,200 elaborate lacquer artifacts were excavated, along with pottery, copper ware, wood ware, jade ware, iron ware and horn work in which there were more than 500 lacquered artifacts and quantities of silk fabric unearthed in the tomb. These discoveries were not only in great quantity, but also the best-preserved examples of the Han Dynasty in Shandong Province, providing very important information in the study of the lacquer and textile artifact industry in the Han Dynasty.

 

These tombs also provide more information on the study of funerary conventions of the Han Dynasty.

 

4. Ancient tower relics of the period between Eastern Wei (534-550) and Northern Qi (550-577) in Yenan City in Hebei Province

 

The remains of a wooden pagoda in north China's Hebei Province dates back to the Northern Dynasties (AD 386-581).

 

The ancient tower relics are the remains of a square wooden pagoda in Yenan City, north China's Hebei Province, which dates back to the period between Eastern Wei (AD 534-550) and Northern Qi (AD 550-577). Each side is 45 meters long and the pagoda’s foundation is especially solid -- six meters deep and alternated with 10 layers of pebbles and earth.

 

Abundant building components were unearthed, such as tiles, column footstones and carved stone and many colored Buddha patterns and relics were excavated, reflecting the scale of the pagoda.

 

The pagoda was in a magnificent scale and was the only Buddhist wooden square pagoda relic found between the Eastern Wei (AD 534-550) and Northern Qi (AD 550-577). A few finds filled in the gaps in archeological knowledge between the Han to Tang dynasties. The pagoda is significant for the study of the Northern Dynasty Buddha temple structures and also for the Buddhist pagoda footstones.

 

5. Ancient tomb of Xu Xianxiu in Northern Qi (550-577) in Taiyuan City in Shanxi Province

 

After months of hard work, Chang Yimin and his colleagues from Shanxi Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology managed to open a giant stone gate, decorated with bas-relief of unfamiliar animals and birds, in July 2002. Upon discovery, they were overwhelmed by a subterranean world, 8.1 meters beneath the earth.

 

Inside the gate was a tomb: the square room was covered with murals depicting more than 200 men and women involved in various ceremonial activities.

"The spectacular murals, covering 330 square meters, are distinctive because of their shining color and the artistic painting techniques which create the impression of flight," said Chang, researcher with the institute and leader of the excavation team.

 

The well-preserved murals are of important value to the research of Chinese painting history.

 

More attracting articles among the tomb are those reflecting Sino-Western cultural exchanges. For instance, a finger ring embedded with gem was believed to come from the West, which provides materials for the study of national integrity and cultural exchanges.

 

6. Ancient city relics in Badong County, Hubei Province

 

The remnants of an ancient county in Badong, central China's Hubei Province, prospered from the Shang Dynasty (c.1600 BC-1100 BC) to the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), in which the most important period was from the Northern and Southern Dynasties (386-589) to the Song Dynasty (960-1279). This was the ancient site of the county seat of Badong.

 

In the 20,000 square meter excavating field, the county’s walls, gates, roads and houses of the Northern and Southern Dynasties; county government, storehouses and slab stone roads of the Sui and Tang dynasties; the civilian house, government district, temple, street and perfect water-providing system were all well protected. In the center of the government district in the Song Dynasty is the official government site. Its core building is large in scale and features a restricted arrangement, including large scale steps in front of the building, doors, enclosing walls, winding corridor, courtyard and pool.

 

The Tang and Song dynasties’ architectural site was largely planned and then constructed. It centered on local authorities: the east, a residential district; the west a cultural establishment and storage district. The arrangement of streets was orderly and symmetrical. As the remains of the county in the Tang and Song dynasties, the relics in Badong were kept well and is the first one in the Three Gorges areas and also rare in the whole country. Badong County relics provide evidence for archeology in city planning and architectural style of the Song Dynasty.

 

7. Ancient city relics of the Tang Dynasty (618-907) in Yanbian City, Jilin Province

 

The ancient city relics of the Tang Dynasty (AD 618-907) were made in Yanbian, northeast China's Jilin Province, in a small village called Xigucheng.

 

The village was called "cheng," meaning "city" in Chinese, because it used to be a great city in the Tang Dynasty (AD 618-907). It was the Zhongjing (central capital) of the Bohai Kingdom, which occupied Northeast China, the sea-border areas of Russia and part of the Korean Peninsula from AD 698 to 926.

 

According to historical annals, the kingdom, built by the Mohe ethnic group, was an autonomous power under the Tang Dynasty. It reached its peak of prosperity while trading with Russia, Japan and the Korean Peninsula, and its capital was built in the style of Chang'an (today's Xi'an), the Tang capital.

 

In AD 926, the Khitan army surrounded the grand capital of the kingdom.

 

Historical records say that, after days of fruitless struggle, the Bohai king walked along the city's Phoenix Avenue, wearing white robes and holding white banners, and surrendered before the horse of the Khitan king.

 

Three years later, the Khitans forced 94,000 Mohe households to move south to today's northeast China's Liaoning Province. To prevent the Mohes from returning to their hometowns, the Khitans burnt down the magnificent Bohai capital.

 

About 400 years after the fall of their kingdom, Mohes disappeared from the history books. Some scholars believe Koreans surnamed Tai descend from the Mohes.

 

Today, only the ruins of a few palaces in the kingdom's capital have been brought to light.

 

But archaeologists have found at the latest site a glazed green porcelain artifact in the shape of an animal head, according to Song Yubin from the Jilin Provincial Archaeological Research Institute.

 

With its clenched big, sharp teeth and flying horns, the dragon-like animal combines the Tang style with those of the ethnic culture.

 

8. Imperial palace relics of the Jin Dynasty (1115-1234) in Heilongjiang Province

 

The Liuxiu Village Palace site in Northeast China is the remains of a grand palace in Acheng, Heilongjiang Province. The palace, covering 50,000 square meters, was built by the Nuzhens in the Jin Dynasty (1115-1234).

 

The palace site, facing the southeast, consists of a main hall, corridor, back chamber, frontispiece and cloister. The frontispiece lies in the middle of a northeast cloister; the main hall, symmetrical with frontispiece, lies in the northeast cloister; the back chamber lies behind the main hall; the corridor connects the main hall and the back chamber; the cloister is a square and the each side is 184 meters long.

 

The Liuxiu Village Palace makes great contributions to knowledge of the political system, religions, customs and architecture style of the time.

 

9. Ancient brewery plant of the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368) in Jiangxi Province

 

So, to the ruins of a 700-year-old spirit distillery in Lidu, central China's Jiangxi Province.

The distillery, covering 15,000 square meters, retains its original well, cellar, stoves, pipelines, distilling equipment and walls. In the Yuan (1279-1368) and Ming (1368-1644) dynasties, the Chinese made many tons of high-quality spirits with gaoliang (Chinese sorghum) there.

 

The discovery helps end the argument over the origin of distilled spirits in China, said Liu Qingzhu, director of the Archaeological Research Institute at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

 

Chinese legends said liquor was first produced in the Xia Dynasty in the 21st century BC.

 

But the alcohol our ancestors drank before the 13th century might not have been as strong as the spirits we have today, said Liu.

 

10. Storehouse relics of the Yuan Dynasty in Ningbo City of Zhejiang Province

 

Relics from a Song Dynasty (960-1279) porcelain warehouse in Ningbo, east China's Zhejiang Province, also make the list. The Yongfeng warehouse relic site lies right in the center of Ningbo city, and won protection only after a fierce battle with construction developers.

 

 

Upon discovery of the relic site, the institute immediately provided a detailed proposal demonstrating to the municipal government that the site was worth protecting, and argued that a relic site park should be built instead of a new neighborhood.

 

After several months of debate, and with the support of many local people, who called the mayor’s hotline, e-mailed or wrote letters, the municipal government finally decided to refund the developer 60 million yuan, and contributed a further 40 million yuan for the construction of the relic theme park.

 

Up until November 2001, the excavated field expanded to 1,000 square meters and excavated a great deal of relics. The excavation work restarted in March 2002, and the excavated area expanded to 2,500 square meters. There was found the local government-owned storehouses of Song, Yuan and Ming dynasties which centered on the Yongfeng storehouse in Qingyuan Street of the Yuan Dynasty and a lot of porcelain work from famous kilns in the Central Plains of the Song and Yuan dynasties.

 

It’s the most famous archeological finding in Ningbo city and it’s very important for archeological knowledge of ancient architecture of the period. The Yongfeng storehouse was perfectly preserved. It’s the first time a large-scaled storehouse site was found in China.

 

(China.org.cn)

 

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