Global Times

DIGGING IN THE DIRT

▶ Peking University celebrates 100 years of success in the field of archaeolog­y

- By Chen Xi xuliuliu@ globaltime­s. com. cn

Anew exhibition kicked off at the Arthur M. Sackler Museum of Art and Archaeolog­y at Peking University on Tuesday to mark the 100th anniversar­y of the establishm­ent of the archaeolog­y discipline at the school. Archaeolog­ists from both China and abroad said that the progress made by the School of Archaeolog­y and Museology at Peking University is a mirror reflecting the rise of modern Chinese archaeolog­y and has allowed it to stand at the forefront of the discipline in the world.

One hundred years ago, after modern archaeolog­y was introduced to China, Peking University set up an archaeolog­y research room. In 1952, Peking University establishe­d the first archaeolog­y major in the country.

The exhibition Peking University Archaeolog­y: 100th Anniversar­y 70 Years of Archaeolog­y Specialty Teaching in China shows the important archaeolog­ical milestones that Peking University has achieved over the past century and how archaeolog­y has gradually developed into a top sophistica­ted discipline in China.

Holding up a mirror

Chen Xingcan, director of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences’ Institute of Archaeolog­y, said during the Tuesday celebratio­n that the developmen­t of archaeolog­y at Peking University is a microcosm of Chinese archaeolog­y. “Over the past 100 years, Peking University has made significan­t contributi­ons to the developmen­t of Chinese archaeolog­y and the protection of cultural heritage when it comes to the establishm­ent of the discipline, personnel training and scientific research.”

In March, the Piluo Site in Daocheng county, Southwest China’s Sichuan Province, a large- scale Paleolithi­c site that was excavated under the leadership of professors from Peking University, was listed as one of China’s top 10 archaeolog­ical discoverie­s of 2021 by the country’s National Cultural Heritage Administra­tion.

Ran Honglin, head of the archaeolog­ical team at the Sanxingdui Ruins site, one of the most visited archaeolog­ical wonders in 2021, told the Global Times that many profession­als working in the various pits at the site, including himself, are graduates from the School of Archaeolog­y and Museology at Peking University and that he felt very honored to participat­e in such a significan­t archaeolog­ical discovery.

Shen Ruiwen, dean of the School of Archaeolog­y and Museology at Peking University, told the Global Times that many universiti­es in China have imitated the “Peking model” of teaching archaeolog­y, especially when it comes to field archaeolog­y internship.

Establishe­d more than 60 years ago, the course is a four- month- long internship divided into four stages: field investigat­ion, formal site excavation, interior finishing and submitting archaeolog­ical reports.

He pointed out that the internship at Peking University is much more systematic than similar courses at Western universiti­es because in Western universiti­es this course is not led by teachers personally. In the West, students go to dig sites and as long as they stay for a certain number of days, they can get credit for the course. However, these students may only actually perform just one or two of the above four steps.

Internatio­nal communicat­ion

Ninety- year- old archaeolog­ist and former professor at Peking University Yan Wenming said that when they initially set out to establish an archaeolog­y field with Chinese characteri­stics, they realized they needed to have a global vision. This realizatio­n led to a series of internatio­nal exchanges.

According to Shen, the school has establishe­d several student exchange programs with universiti­es in countries such as the US, Japan, Poland and Turkey. Additional­ly, the field archaeolog­y internship has attracted many teachers and students overseas to come to Peking University.

“Some foreign professors bring their students to our school for one to two months for an exchange in the field archaeolog­y internship. Meanwhile, we also send outstandin­g students abroad for internatio­nal exchanges,” he said.

Im Sang- taek, a professor of at Pusan National University in South Korea, recalled that his time at the university as a visiting scholar was particular­ly significan­t and that he was very impressed by how the school intertwine­d theory and practice in the field.

Global recognitio­n

The level of sophistica­tion in archaeolog­y that Peking University has achieved in the past century has also been recognized by the world.

Dame Jessica Rawso, a professor of Chinese Art and Archaeolog­y at Oxford University, said in a prerecorde­d video address that archaeolog­ists and historians around the world look to the school as “a leader in our understand­ing of China’s past.”

“Today the school is working with teams in Sichuan Province in new finds in Sanxingdui. And while these important contributi­ons have been made, the wider world has come to recognize the exceptiona­l role that China has played in its developmen­t in ancient societies alongside those in Western Asia and Egypt,” she said.

Dorian Q Fuller, an internatio­nally renowned plant archaeolog­ist from the Institute of Archaeolog­y at University College London, also pointed out that the School of Archaeolog­y and Museology at Peking University has continued training archaeolog­ists to the highest standards over the years and remains at the forefront of combining teaching and cutting- edge research. Looking ahead to the new era, Shen said they will continue devoting themselves to the developmen­t of archaeolog­y with “Chinese features,

style and ethos.”

 ?? ?? Page Editor:
An archaeolog­ical diary written by the well- known late archaeolog­ist Su Bingqi
The Arthur M. Sackler Museum of Art and Archaeolog­y at Peking University
Photos: Courtesy of the School of Archaeolog­y and Museology at Peking University
Page Editor: An archaeolog­ical diary written by the well- known late archaeolog­ist Su Bingqi The Arthur M. Sackler Museum of Art and Archaeolog­y at Peking University Photos: Courtesy of the School of Archaeolog­y and Museology at Peking University

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