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Sacrificial offerings
unearthed at the Sanxingdui, an important relic site in southwest China's
Sichuan Province, have proven that the site used to be a pilgrimage center
in the world during ancient times.
Zhang Jizhong, deputy curator of the Sichuan
Provincial Sanxingdui Museum, said that Chinese archaeologists have
excavated a piece of shell during the ongoing excavation of the site,
dating back between 3,000 and 5,000 years ago.
Zhang said, the shell and a great number of seashells
and ivories unearthed here previously came from various places around the
world. "This means that Sanxingdui was a pilgrimage center in the
world in ancient times," Zhang noted.
A great number of bronze ware and jade ware have been
unearthed at the site, located in the city of Guanghan, Sichuan Province.
Zhang Jizhong said the majority of the bronze ware
excavated at the site are sacrificial utensils, which feature the culture
of different regions.
Bronze sculptures and crutches unearthed at the site
have close relations with the world's famous Mayan Civilization and the
culture of ancient Egypt.
Experts said the Chinese bronze ware is divided into
seven categories, but none of the seven can include the bronze wares
unearthed at the site. Much of the bronze ware discovered at Sanxingdui
have never been seen in other places of China, they said.
Experts believe the seashells and ivories excavated at
the site between 1986 and 1988 were brought to the site by pilgrims for
worshipping and barter trade.
They confirmed that the ancient kingdom of Sanxingdui
had trade relations with ancient western Asian countries such as Persia
and Egypt, and from other parts of the world.
However, what surprised Chinese experts is that there
is no historical record of the sacrificial pits, built in the Shang
Dynasty (16th Century B.C-11th Century B.C.), excavated at the site.
They have not found any characters except some signs
on golden crutches.
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