 |
|
Photo taken on Sept. 8, 2007 shows part
of an ancient brick tomb in Kuqa County, northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur
Autonomous Region.(Xinhua Photo)
|
URUMQI, Sept. 12 (Xinhua) -- Nine 1,700-year-old brick tombs have been
discovered in northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, which, experts
say, provide valuable clues for the research of exchanges between the central
Chinese government at that time and remote Western Regions.
It is the first time ancient tombs with typical
characteristics of China's main Han nationality have been found in the Uygur
ethnic region, said Yu Zhiyong, deputy head of the Xinjiang Cultural Relics and
Archaeology Institute.
Archaeologists from Beijing, Shaanxi and Xinjiang
concluded that the tombs were built between the middle and late third century
and fourth century.
The tombs were unearthed during the construction of a
road earlier this year in Kuqa county, 740 km from Xinjiang's capital Urumqi and
part of the ancient Qiuci State.
Qiuci State, which existed between the second century
BC and 860 AD, was one of the 36 states in the Western Regions, a term used in
the Han Dynasty (206 BC-220 AD) for areas west of Yumen Pass including present
Xinjiang and parts of central Asia.
The tombs would help archaeologists with research
into the political, economic and cultural exchanges between the Central Plains
government and states in the western oasis, and on the cultural influence of the
Central Plains on the Western Regions, Yu added.
Archaeologists from the Xinjiang institute have
excavated nine tombs since Aug. 22, finding skeletons of more than 30 people,
some ancient coins and more than 60 pottery jars. It is thought there are
another three tombs to be excavated.
Yu said the people buried in the tombs were probably
either people from the western regions deeply influenced by the Han culture or
the Han residents in the region.
The ancient Qiuci state became part of China's
territory in 59 BC during the Western Han Dynasty (206BC-AD24). Many Han people
move to Qiuci to avoid war during the Western Jin Dynasty (AD265-317).
[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]