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Sanxingdui

 

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Sanxingdui


 
 



Sanxingdui is an ancient ChineseChina

China is a cultural region and ancient civilization in East Asia....
 city where archaeologists discovered remarkable artifactsArtifact (archaeology)

In archaeology, an artifact or artefact is any object made or modified by a human culture, and often one later recove...
 that radiocarbon dated circa 12th-11th centuries BCE, and Sanxingdui is the name given to this previously unknown Bronze AgeBronze Age Overview

The term Bronze Age refers to a period in human cultural development when the most advanced metalworking included technique...
 culture. The museum is located near the city of GuanghanGuanghan

Guanghan is a Chinese city in Deyang, the province of Sichuan....
, China.

Location

Coordinates: Latitude 30°57'20.53"N Longitude:104°19'16.38"E GuanghanFacts About Guanghan

Guanghan is a Chinese city in Deyang, the province of Sichuan....


The Sanxingdui archaeological site is located about 40 kilometers northeast of ChengduChengdu

Chengdu, located in southwest China, is the capital of the Sichuan province and a sub-provincial city....
 in Sichuan Province, 10 kilometers east of the city of GuanghanGuanghan

Guanghan is a Chinese city in Deyang, the province of Sichuan....
, but 50km from the city of treasures

Discovery



In 1929, a farmer unearthed a large stash of jadeJade

An ornamental stone, jade is a name applied to two different rocks that are made up of different silicate minerals....
 relics while digging a well, many of which found their way through the years into the hands of private collectors. Generations of Chinese archaeologists searched the area without success until 1986, when workers accidentally found sacrificial pits containing thousands of gold, bronze, jade, and pottery artifacts that had been broken (perhaps ritually disfigured), burned, and carefully buried. Researchers were astonished to find an artistic style that was completely unknown in the history of Chinese artChinese art

Chinese art is art that, whether ancient or modern, originated in or is practiced in China or by Chinese artists or perform...
, whose baseline had been the history and artefacts of the Yellow River civilization(s).

Ancient Bronze Casting

This ancient culture had remarkably advanced bronze casting technology which was acquired by adding lead to the usual combination of copper and tin creating a stronger substance that could create substantially larger and heavier objects; for instance, the world's oldest life-size standing human statueStatue

A statue is a sculpture depicting a specific entity, usually a person, event, animal or object....
 (260 cm. high, 180 kilograms), and a bronze treeTree

A tree is a large, perennial, woody plant....
 with birds, flowers, and ornaments (396 cm.), which some have identified as renderings of the fusangFusang

Fusang is a country described by the Chinese Buddhist missionary Hui-Sheng in 499 CE, as a place 20,000 Chinese li beyon...
 tree of Chinese mythology. The most striking finds were large bronze masks and bronze heads (some with gold foil masks) represented with angular human features and exaggerated oblique eyes, some with protruding eye pupils and large upper ears. Based upon the design of these heads, archeologists believe they were mounted on wooden supports or totemTotem Overview

A totem is any natural or supernatural being or animal which watches over or assists a group of people, such as a family, cl...
s, perhaps dressed in clothing. Other bronze artefacts include birds with eagle-like bills, tigers, a large snake, zoomorphic masks, bells, and what appears to be a bronze spoked wheel but is more likely to be decoration from an ancient shield. Apart from bronze, Sanxingdui finds included jade artifacts consistent with earlier Chinese neolithic cultures, such as congCong (jade)

A cong is a form of jade artifact from ancient China....
 and zhang.

Cosmology

As far back as Neolithic times, the Chinese identified each of the four quadrants of the sky with animals: a bird with the South, the tiger with the West, the dragon with the East, and a tortoise/snake with the North. Each of these compass points was associated with a constellation that was visible in the relevant season: the dragon in the spring, the bird in the summer, etc. Interestingly, these are the four animals that predominate the finds of Sanxingdui--birds, dragons, snakes and tigers, leading to a theory that these bronzes representing the universe. It is unclear whether they formed part of ritual events designed to communicate with the spirits of the universe (or ancestral spirits). As no written records remain it is difficult to determine the intended uses of objects found. Some believe that the continued prevalence of depictions of these animals, especially in the later Han period, was an attempt by humans to "fit into" their understanding of their world. (The jades that were found at Sanxingdui also seem to correlate with the six known types of ritual jades of ancient China, again each associated with a compass point (N, S, E, W) plus the heavens and earth.)

All the Sanxingdui discoveries aroused scholarly interest, but the bronzes were what excited the world. Task Rosen of the British MuseumBritish Museum

The British Museum in London is one of the world's largest and most important museums of human history and culture....
 considered them to be more outstanding than the Terracotta ArmyTerracotta Army

The Terracotta Army or Terra-cotta Warriors and Horses is a collection of 8,099 life-size terra cotta figures of warri...
 in Xi'anXi'an

Xi'an, is the capital of Shaanxi province in China and a sub-provincial city....
. The first exhibits of Sanxingdui bronzes were held in BeijingBeijing

Beijing [[[Media:Beijing pronounced in English way.ogg|English Pronunciation]]] , a city in northern [[China]], is the [[Capital of China|capital]]...
 (1987, 1990) and the Olympic MuseumOlympic Museum

The Olympic Museum in Lausanne, Switzerland houses permanent and temporary exhibits relating to sport and the Olympic moveme...
 in Lausanne (1993). Sanxingdui exhibits traveled worldwide, and tickets were sold out everywhere; from the Hybary Arts Museum in MunichMunich

colspan="2" bgcolor="BBDDFF" | Munich|-bgcolor="#FFFFFF"...
 (1995), the Swiss National MuseumSwiss National Museum

The Swiss National Museum or Landesmuseum is one of the most important art museums of cultural history in Europe and t...
 in Zurich (1996), the British Museum in London (1996), the National Museum of DenmarkNational Museum of Denmark

The National Museum of Denmark in Copenhagen is Denmarks central museum of cultural history, comprising the histories of Dan...
 in Copenhagen (1997), the Solomon R. Guggenheim MuseumSolomon R. Guggenheim Museum

Founded in 1937, The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum is a modern art museum located on the Upper East Side in New York City....
 in New York (1998), several museums in JapanJapan

is an island country in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean, it lies to the east of China, Korea, and Russia, stretching from...
 (1998), the National Palace MuseumNational Palace Museum Overview

The National Palace Museum is an art gallery and museum in Taipei City, Taiwan, Republic of China containing artifacts of a...
 in Taipei (1999), to the Asian Civilisations MuseumAsian Civilisations Museum

The Asian Civilisations Museum is an institution which forms a part of the three museums of the National Museums of Singapor...
 in Singapore (2007). In 1997, the opened near the original site.

Possible Influence

The Sanxingdui Culture was a mysterious civilization in southern China, which was in the kingdom of ShuShu (state)

Shu was an ancient state in Sichuan, China....
 during the period of the Shang DynastyShang Dynasty

The Shang Dynasty or Yin Dynasty is the first confirmed historic Chinese Dynasty and ruled in the northeastern regi...
. Although they developed a different method of bronze-making from the Shang, their culture was never recorded by Chinese historians. Sanxingdui culture is thought to be divided into several phases. The first one may have been independent, while the later phases merged with BaBa (state)

Ba was an ancient state in eastern Sichuan, China....
, ChuChu (state)

Chu was a kingdom in what is now southern China during the Spring and Autumn period and Warring States Period....
, and other cultures.

Besides Sanxingdui, other archeological discoveries in Sichuan, including the BaodunBaodun culture

The Baodun culture was a Neolithic culture centered on the Chengdu plain in Sichuan, China....
 and JinshaJinsha

Jinsha is an archaeological site in Sichuan, China....
 cultures, all indicate that civilizations in southern China go back at least 5,000 years. Such evidence of independent cultures in different regions of China defies the traditional theory that the Yellow RiverYellow River

The Yellow River is the second longest river in China and the fifth in the world....
 was the sole "cradle of Chinese civilization."

See also

  • Erligang cultureErligang culture

    The Erligang culture is the term used by archaeologists to refer to a Bronze Age archaeological culture in China....
  • Erlitou cultureErlitou culture

    The Erlitou culture is a name given by archaeologists to an Early Bronze Age society that existed in China....
  • History of ChinaFacts About History of China

    The history of China is detailed by historical records dating as far back as 16th century BC....
  • History of metallurgy in ChinaHistory of metallurgy in China Overview

    Metallurgy in China has a long history....
  • Wucheng cultureFacts About Wucheng culture

    The Wucheng culture was a Bronze Age archaeological culture in Jiangxi, China....


External links

  • , National Gallery of Art
  • , Seattle Art Museum