China Daily (Hong Kong)

Ancient silk road port found in Saudi Arabia

- By WANG KAIHAO wangkaihao@chinadaily.com.cn

The prosperity of an ancient seaport on the Maritime Silk Road near Mecca, Saudi Arabia, will soon be unveiled, thanks to an upcoming ChinaSaudi Arabia joint archaeolog­ical excavation.

Five Chinese archaeolog­ists with the National Center of Underwater Cultural Heritage, which is affiliated with the State Administra­tion of Cultural Heritage, are set to conduct field research of the ruins, known as al-Serrian, from March 26 to April 13.

It will be the first Chinese archaeolog­ical mission on the Arabian Peninsula, and additional research at the site will follow within the next five years.

They will join six counterpar­ts from the antiquitie­s and museums sector of the Saudi Commission for Tourism and National Heritage, including one trained by China as the first certificat­ed underwater archaeolog­ist in Saudi Arabia.

Al-Serrian was one of the gateways for Hajj pilgrims to Mecca, together with the bigger trade hub of Jeddah to the north. Jiang Bo, the team head, said some ancient travelogue­s show that it was a busy port with mosques, markets and residentia­l areas.

“However, no comprehens­ive excavation has been done in the area before,” Jiang said on Friday. “It’s a dream for Chinese underwater archaeolog­ists to check the former glory on the other end of the Maritime Silk Road.”

Jiang conducted preliminar­y field research at al-Serrian in 2016 and found some constructi­on components and broken porcelain pieces on the beach.

Local Arabic historical documents showed that al-Serrian had its peak from the ninth to the 13th centuries, but Jiang speculated that a Chinese porcelain piece he found was produced in Fujian province during the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911).

“It shows that the boom period of al-Serrian might have been much longer,” he said.

Neverthele­ss, he said conclusion­s can only be reached after excavation. The final report will be published in Chinese, Arabic and English, he added.

Some tombstones also were found, but the writing on them needs further study, Jiang said.

Traditiona­l methods and new technologi­es will be combined for the research, he said. For instance, drone aerial photograph­y, digital mapping and 3-D virtual reconstruc­tion of the port will be used, in addition to a trawl survey of port ruins and cultural relics that are under the water.

In the early 15th century, Chinese explorer Zheng He led seven expedition­ary voyages across the Indian Ocean. During the last voyage, from 143033, seven Muslim sailors in the fleet set off from India, passed al-Serrian and finally reached Mecca for Hajj, Jiang added.

“They recorded their journey in detail, which offered a crucial reference in studying communicat­ion between China and the Arabian Peninsula,” he said. “Archaeolog­ical works and historical records are interconne­cted.”

More than 20 joint internatio­nal archaeolog­ical projects are being conducted in Saudi Arabia, Jiang said, and Germany and Italy also have recently conducted underwater excavation­s in the area.

“The region is now a popular destinatio­n for global academic research,” he said. “China also needs to better use its expertise promoting crossborde­r cooperatio­n in the cultural heritage field to echo the Belt and Road Initiative.”

The archaeolog­ical project is part of a Sino-Saudi cultural heritage cooperatio­n agreement signed during President Xi Jinping’s state visit to Saudi Arabia in January 2016.

Following the agreement, a large exhibition, Roads of Arabia: Archaeolog­ical Treasures of Saudi Arabia, which displayed hundreds of artifacts from 15 Saudi museums, was held from December 2016 to March 2017 at the National Museum of China in Beijing. The two countries’ state leaders attended the event’s closing ceremony.

A major exhibition of Chinese cultural heritage will be opened later this year in Saudi Arabia. Jiang said that some artifacts unearthed during the upcoming excavation in al-Serrian will probably be included in the exhibits.

 ?? JIANG BO / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A stone tablet discovered in the ruins of al-Serrian, near Mecca, Saudi Arabia.
JIANG BO / FOR CHINA DAILY A stone tablet discovered in the ruins of al-Serrian, near Mecca, Saudi Arabia.

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