Global Times

Hongshan Culture: earliest civilizati­on found in Northeast China

- Global Times

In autumn 1983, deep inside the rolling hills of Northeast China’s Liaoning Province archaeolog­ists were unearthing a clay sculpture at the Niuheliang Ruins excavation site, the center of the Hongshan Culture.

The Hongshan Culture, existing around 5,000 to 6,000 years ago, is one of the earliest cultures that existed in Northeast China.

As the dirt on the sculpture was brushed off, a human- size head of a woman was revealed to everyone.

As more soil layers were excavated at the site, the ruins of a temple were revealed. The female figure was located in the western section of the temple. Based on the clay sculpture, the archaeolog­ists named this location atop the mountain the “Goddess Temple.” Experts speculated that this was most likely a temple used to make sacrifices at the time. Archaeolog­ists at the site also dis

covered a piece of jade shaped like an animal head with notches

in it lying on the chest of the tomb owner.

Experts later determined that the Hongshan Culture used jade as ritual implements and that this had an influence on the later Shang ( C. 1600- 1046BC) and Western Zhou ( 1046BC- 771BC) dynasties.

Long before the Niuheliang Ruins were discovered, the first traces of what would become known as the Hongshan Culture were identified in 1921 on Hongshan Mountain in Chifeng, North China’s Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region.

In 1954, well- known archaeolog­ist Yin Da gave the culture the name Hongshan, after the area where it was first discovered.

Archeologi­cal sites related to the Hongshan Culture extend from Northeast China’s Liaoning Province to the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region.

In 2019, a total of 78 graves, one altar, 29 sacrificia­l sites and relics including over 140 jade items were unearthed at Banlashan Mountain in Chaoyang, Liaoning Province.

The culture is known for its unearthed jade artifacts, most of which were carved into animals such as bears, pigs and fish.

Among them, the most standout figure was of a Chinese dragon. It was one of the oldest Chinese dragon figures ever discovered.

 ?? Photo: IC ?? A dragon- shaped jade carving unearthed from the Niuheliang Ruins
Photo: IC A dragon- shaped jade carving unearthed from the Niuheliang Ruins

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