ZHENGZHOU, July 18 (Xinhuanet) -- Chinese archaeologists have discovered the
ruins of a complete ancient village on the western edge of Yinxu, an important
archaeological excavation site dating back more than 3,000 years, in central
China's Henan province.
Archaeologists from the Archaeological Research Institute underthe Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences CASS) and Henan Provincial Cultural Heritage and
Archaeological Research Institute unearthed 27 homes (or suites) with 70 rooms
during their excavations at Yinxu.
The village has the first houses inhabited by ordinary people to be found
at Yinxu.
"This is the first time that semi-subterranean residences half built into
the ground have ever been found at Yinxu or among ruinsfrom the Xia (2100
BC-1600 BC), Shang (1600 BC-1100 BC) and Zhou (1100 BC-771 BC) Dynasties," said
Wang Xuerong, an associate research fellow with the Archaeological Research
Institute under the CASS.
"Although the unearthed rooms are small compared with the foundations of
palaces and temples unearthed at Yinxu, they reflect the vivid and colorful
lives of ancient common people who lived in areas adjacent to the city proper,"
Wang said.
The discovery provided completely new materials for the study of society
during the Shang Dynasty (1600 BC-1100 BC).
The ruins of Yin (Yinxu) were discovered an 1899 in Anyang, capital of the
Shang Dynasty. Yin was the ancient name for the Shang Dynasty.
Excavations at Yinxu ruins have revealed tombs, foundations of palaces and
temples, bronzes, jade carvings, lacquer, white carvedceramics, and high-fired,
green-glazed ware, and oracle bones.
One of the major discoveries of Yinxu is the inscribed animal bones and
tortoise shells, known as the oracle bones. The bones and shells, used for
divination by Shang kings, carry the earliestknown examples of Chinese
characters.
The discovery of the ancient village enriched the study of Yinxu culture,
according to Wang.
The newly-excavated houses were concentrated and laid out on north-south
lines. The houses were properly spaced for ventilationand all the rooms were
connected by "halls" and "living rooms", similar to modern buildings.
Earthen platforms found in some rooms were used as "beds", experts believe.
Judging from the number of rooms and beds, the population of this ancient
village was estimated to be around 100 to 150, Wang said.
The buildings included one-room, one-bed room and one-living room, two-bed
room and one-living room, and three-bed room and one-living room apartments,
indicating the different social status of the villagers.
Archaeologists confirmed that these houses were built over several decades
around 1200 BC.
Intact cooking ranges were also found at the ancient village.
Archaeologists with the Archaeological Research Institute underthe CASS and
Henan Provincial Cultural Heritage and ArchaeologicalResearch Institute have
been excavating an area of 23,000 squares meters at Yinxu since April this year.
They excavated 380 tombs of different historical periods from the Shang
Dynasty to Song Dynasty (960-1279), from which several thousand gold, bronze,
iron, jade, stone, pottery, porcelain, bone,shell, lead and lacquer items were
unearthed.
Also excavated from the tombs were 150 bronze weapons of the Shang Dynasty,
including daggers, spears, swords, axes and arrowheads. Enditem
|