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ZHENGZHOU, June 20 (Xinhuanet) -- Preparations are proceeding well in constructing the first national museum on Chinese characters in the famous Yin Ruins, where oracle bone inscriptions -- China's earliest writing -- were found, said a local official Monday.
Duan Zhenmei, director of Cultural Relics Department
of Anyang city, home to the Yin Ruins, said the will-be-built China Character
Museum has won approval from State Cultural Heritage Administration. The site
will be in vicinity with the Yin Ruins Museum.
Land requisition and architectural design of the
museum are underway, said Duan, adding that upon completion, the museum will be
the only national museum dedicated to Chinese characters.
According to plan, the character museum would cover a
land area of 20 hectares, with 30,000 square meters of exhibition space. The
museum is expected to be completed in three to five years, at a cost of 300
million yuan (about 36 million US dollars).
The decision to build a national character museum
came after a proposal submitted in March by 25 members of the Chinese People's
Political Consultative Conference, the country's top advisory body.The proposal
said that Chinese characters were very unique in human civilization and deserved
to have such a special national museum for their collection, preservation and
exhibition.
The oracle bone inscriptions, the earliest known
Chinese characters, date from the late Shang (also called Yin) Dynasty
(c.1600-1100 BC). The oracle bones were first discovered in 1899 in Anyang,
famous for the Yin Ruins, which are about five hours southby train from Beijing.
Since then, more than 150,000 oracle items have been discovered in the Yin
ruins, capital of the late Shang Dynasty.
Recording harvests, astronomical phenomena, worship
and wars inthe Shang Dynasty, the inscriptions on tortoise shells and animal
bones from the Yin ruins are scattered around the world.
The ancient script, with its majority as pictographs,
is so different in form from the present Chinese writing that a layman can
identify no character, neither its meanings. Enditem |