The Star Malaysia

Ancient artifacts found

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Excavation at Beijing suburbs reveals more than 1,000 tombs and ceramics dating 2,000 years.

BEIJING: The Chinese capital’s future administra­tive hub was already bustling 2,000 years ago.

Government agencies excavating a site in the far south-eastern Beijing suburbs said they have found ancient city walls and more than 1,000 tombs, most of which are dated to the eastern Han Dynasty (25-220 AD) and some even earlier.

The excavation­s, made this year ahead of developmen­t of a new administra­tive district for Beijing, shed light on life in a county-level city that was alive with activity several hundred years earlier than experts previously thought.

Archaeolog­ical teams this year found ceramic and porcelain urns, earthen sculptures of animals, copper tools and mirrors, some of which are believed to be made by the Yan, a northern kingdom that stood for centuries before falling to the conqueror who unified China and became its first emperor in 221 BC.

The excavators also found ruins of a squareshap­ed city with walls 600m on each side from the Han Dynasty.

Modern Beijing suffers from traffic gridlock and overcrowdi­ng with 22 million residents, prompting officials to relocate many government agencies from the city centre to a newly developed site in the suburb of Tongzhou, about 24km away.

Under President Xi Jinping’s calls for China to show greater “cultural self-confidence,” local-level government­s have been touting their respective historical relics and archaeolog­ical finds.

Beijing officials said this week that they would assess the archaeolog­ical value of some of the artefacts.

Tongzhou is mostly known today as a bedroom community with soaring apartment blocks housing workers who commute to jobs in central Beijing.

The area was previously believed to have been developed in the Sui and Tang Dynasties (581907 AD). — AP

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 ?? — AFP ?? Valuable find: Some of the figurines and bowls being displayed at the Beijing Stone Carving Art Museum. An area the size of 142 football fields was excavated.
— AFP Valuable find: Some of the figurines and bowls being displayed at the Beijing Stone Carving Art Museum. An area the size of 142 football fields was excavated.

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