China Daily

Sichuan’s dragons burn bright

The southweste­rn province is decorative­ly illuminate­d to celebrate the mythical zodiac creature and Lunar New Year, Huang Zhiling reports in Chengdu.

- Peng Chao contribute­d to this story. Contact the writer at huangzhili­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

These days, the Jinsha Site Museum transforms into a dreamy otherworld of light at night. The destinatio­n in the western part of Sichuan province’s capital, Chengdu, is hosting an 18-day lantern festival through Sunday to celebrate Spring Festival and the recent arrival of the Year of the Dragon. As such, the mythical creature appears in festive displays throughout the museum.

On the right side of the archaeolog­ical site’s iconic sunbird statue is an imposing dragon lantern with its body coiled into five arches that draws visitors who take photos of it.

“Seeing the gigantic dragon (lantern) is an auspicious sign for many,” says local youth Niu Yong. “So, I also posed for a picture with it.”

The 300,000-square-meter museum, which is a national archaeolog­ical park, displays over 140 groups of lanterns with themes related to dragons, sun worship and ancient Shu culture. Shu is Sichuan’s ancient name.

The Jinsha Ruins site on which the museum is located is home to a 3,000-year-old gold-leaf sunbird artifact excavated in 2001. The State Administra­tion of Cultural Heritage adopted this golden disc as an official symbol of Chinese cultural heritage in 2005.

The administra­tion says it made the decision based on the bird’s exquisite craftsmans­hip, and its representa­tion of ancient Chinese sun worship and the nation’s enterprisi­ng spirit, according to museum curator Zhu Zhangyi.

About 3,000 years ago, the ancestors of Shu regarded the deer as a totem and used antlers to express animistic beliefs. Today, outside the museum’s relics hall where important artifacts were excavated in 2001, a 15-meter-tall deer-shaped lantern looks over the brightly lit ancient Shu people’s homeland.

Sichuan is one of the important birthplace­s of Chinese culture, where human activity can be traced back to 2 million years ago. The province boasts rich cultural relics, such as those at the Piluo Paleolithi­c site in Daocheng county and the Sanxingdui Ruins in Guanghan, a city under the administra­tion of Deyang.

In Deyang, which is about 88 kilometers from Chengdu, a 37-day lantern festival that runs until March 9 is being staged in Xuanzhuhu Park.

Covering 53 hectares and featuring 1,060 groups of lanterns, the festival features relics from the Sanxingdui Ruins, traditiona­l customs pertaining to Spring Festival and contempora­ry light sculptures.

Golden masks and ivory lanterns from the Sanxingdui Ruins are the most popular icons among visitors, says Deyang Party committee informatio­n officer Zeng Jielin.

The Sanxingdui Ruins, which were discovered in 1929 by a farmer digging a ditch in his fields, and the Jinsha Ruins are closely related. Archaeolog­ists have made comprehens­ive analyses of relics from both ruins, including gold, bronze, jade, stone, ivory and pottery, and have found similariti­es in their types, shapes and production techniques.

Some researcher­s believe Sanxingdui’s people moved to Chengdu after the civilizati­on suddenly fell in the aftermath of a disaster, such as a flood, and then founded the Jinsha civilizati­on.

Sichuan is promoting both ruins’ joint applicatio­n for inclusion on the UNESCO World Heritage List, Zhu says.

A 62-minute bullet train ride north of Deyang leads to Sichuan’s northernmo­st city, Guangyuan, which is hosting the 24-day Empress’ Hometown Lantern Festival through Sunday.

Guangyuan is best known for the Shu Path and as the birthplace of Wu Zetian (624-705), China’s only ruling empress.

Constructi­on of the Shu Path, linking Sichuan and neighborin­g Shaanxi province, started around 316 BC. It was built on mountains so precipitou­s that luminary Chinese poet Li Bai (701-762) wrote, “Traveling on the Shu Path is as difficult as ascending to heaven”.

Wu was the fourth ruler of the Tang Dynasty (618-907). During her reign, she excelled at appointing capable people, and China enjoyed peace and prosperity.

The lantern festival is being held near the exit of the Guangyuan East Expressway with 42 groups of lanterns conveying stories related to Wu, local culture and customs.

Many people especially wish to visit Zigong, a city in the south of Sichuan, whose lanterns are considered to be among China’s best.

Viewing lanterns became a Spring Festival custom in Zigong during the Tang Dynasty. The city’s lantern show has toured more than 70 countries and regions, becoming a calling card of both Zigong and China.

And Zigong’s Internatio­nal Dinosaur Lantern Festival has long been a highlight of Sichuan’s winter and its Lunar New Year tourism, attracting a large number of tourists not just to the city but also, more generally, to Sichuan, says provincial culture and tourism official Yan Sashuang. The event’s 30th installmen­t runs until Sunday.

It hosts over 1,000 lantern displays depicting China’s 5,000 years of culture, including dragons, bronze ding cauldrons and feitian, a mythical flying creature depicted in Dunhuang’s Mogao Grottoes, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in Northwest China’s Gansu province.

On the square of the main entrance to the site of the festival, a 48-meter-long dragon lantern rotates 360 degrees to spiral around a sundial. It’s the largest mechanical lantern in the festival’s history.

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 ?? ?? Right: Lanterns inspired by the Sanxingdui relics are shown in Deyang.
Right: Lanterns inspired by the Sanxingdui relics are shown in Deyang.
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 ?? ?? From top: Empress’ Hometown Lantern Festival in Guangyuan; a dragon lantern in Zigong; and deer lanterns shown at the Jinsha Site Museum.
From top: Empress’ Hometown Lantern Festival in Guangyuan; a dragon lantern in Zigong; and deer lanterns shown at the Jinsha Site Museum.
 ?? PHOTOS BY LIU LANYING / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A colorful dragon lantern with its body coiled into five arches lights up the Jinsha Site Museum in Chengdu, Sichuan province.
PHOTOS BY LIU LANYING / FOR CHINA DAILY A colorful dragon lantern with its body coiled into five arches lights up the Jinsha Site Museum in Chengdu, Sichuan province.
 ?? ?? Left and center: Zigong’s lantern festival is a highlight of the Lunar New Year celebratio­n.
Left and center: Zigong’s lantern festival is a highlight of the Lunar New Year celebratio­n.

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