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BONN, Germany, April 21 (Xinhua) -- An exhibition of recent archaeological
discoveries from the city of Xi'an in China's Shaanxi province, including the
gilt crown of a princess of the Tang Dynasty more than 1,000 years ago, opens
here on Friday.
Visitors will see more than 200 pieces discovered in the funerary complexes
and temple furnishings of the emperors and the aristocracy from Qin, Han and
Tang dynasties.
"This is the largest such exhibition outside China," Zhao Rong,Director
General of Shaanxi Provincial Cultural Relics Bureau, told Xinhua on Thursday.
The show also marks 15 years of cooperation between Germany and China in the
domain of the preservation of cultural heritage, he said.
Experts from Germany's Bavarian State Conservation Office and the Roman-Germanic
Central Museum in Mainz, a city of west-central Germany, have
worked closely with the Museum of the Terracotta Army in Lintong and Shaanxi
Archaeological Institute in Xi'an on relic discovery and repair work since 1991.
The bronze water birds in the First Emperor's funerary complex, discovered
and restored by German and Chinese experts, are on display at the exhibition.
For the first time outside Asia, one of the famous terracotta warriors of
the First Emperor Qin Shihuang is being shown in its original coloring.
The exhibition will last until July 23, 2006, and seminars on how to repair
and preserve the ancient relics will take place during the exhibition.
All the relics, taken to Germany on a special plane, were from the vast
necropolis surrounding northeast China's Xi'an, capital of 13 dynasties in
ancient times. Some of the pieces date back to the Zhou Dynasty in 1100 BC.
Numerous tombs of kings and emperors, each of them surrounded by large
numbers of ancillary tombs, can be found along a 180-km stretch of the Wei River
valley and on the mountains surrounding the city. Enditem |