--- SEARCH ---
WEATHER
CHINA
INTERNATIONAL
BUSINESS
CULTURE
GOVERNMENT
SCI-TECH
ENVIRONMENT
LIFE
PEOPLE
TRAVEL
WEEKLY REVIEW
Learning Chinese
Learn to Cook Chinese Dishes
Exchange Rates
Hotel Service


Hot Links
China Development Gateway
Chinese Embassies
Info
FedEx
China Post
China Air Express
Hospitals in China
Chinese Embassies
Foreign Embassies
Golfing China
China
Construction Bank
People's
Bank of China
Industrial and Commercial Bank of China
Travel Agencies
China Travel Service
China International Travel Service
Beijing Youth Travel Service
Links
China Tours
China National Tourism Administration

Loulan Mausoleum Remains Lost
Chinese archaeologists announced last Friday that a ransacked ancient tomb along the Silk Road in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region was not the legendary royal mausoleum of Loulan (Kroraina), as some media reports suggested early last month. In the following report, Ma Zhefei, a journalist working with the Chinese newspaper, China Archaeology News, shares his experiences during a fact-finding investigation he participated in following media reports that the famed tomb had been raided.

A century ago, Swedish explorer Sven Hedin discovered the ruins of the Loulan (Kroraina) Kingdom in the great Lop Nur. That set in motion a series of explorations along the ancient Silk Road, involving Ellsworth Huntington from the United States, Marc Aurel Stein from Britain and Hedin's compatriot Folke Bergman. Unfortunately, it also triggered a series of lootings by tomb raiders.

During last month's Spring Festival period, the ruins of Loulan, under the jurisdiction of Ruoqiang (Qarkilik) in Northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, again became the focus of media and archaeological circles, when a local paper reported that some people had stumbled upon the legendary royal mausoleum of Loulan which had been looted.

In late February, I had the opportunity to join a team of archaeologists from Xinjiang Cultural Heritage and Relics Institute on a fact-finding investigation to the historic site. The field trip had the approval of the State Administration of Cultural Heritage.

Our mission was to examine the site of Loulan, about 1,000 kilometres from the region's capital, Urumqi, and to determine whether the looted tomb was the royal mausoleum.

Important find

On the night of February 20, our team reached the site, located 22 kilometres north of the ancient ruined city of Loulan.

Following the footsteps of local archaeologists, we entered the tomb. After passing through a 10-metre long passage, we found ourselves looking at two burial chambers. There we saw, to our amazement, mural paintings on the walls, layers of wooden blocks for making coffins, textile pieces, human bones, wooden cups, leather bags and saddles, ivory and wooden combs.

After careful examination of these items, Zhang Yuzhong, vice-president of the Xinjiang Cultural Heritage and Relics Institute and the head of our team, told us that the tomb must have been built around the 3rd century, between the late Han Dynasty and the Western and Eastern Jin dynasties (265-420 AD).

Earlier last month, Lin Meicun, a professor with Peking University and a prestigious scholar on Loulan, had said that it was unlikely to be the mausoleum of the Loulan Kings.

He said that Lop Nur was, in the third century, the border between the kingdom and regions under the direct jurisdiction of the Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD 220). Royal mausoleums would have been built in Ruoqiang, the then Loulan capital, which is far from the Lop Nur.

Lin's opinion is shared by Zhang who does not believe the looted tomb is the royal one of Loulan.

Historic annals record that the Loulan Kingdom, which established itself around 2nd century BC, was renamed the Shanshan Kingdom in 77 BC, and lasted until about the 5th to the 6th centuries AD, explained Zhang.

Despite this fact, Zhang and his colleagues consider the tomb to be highly significant and suggest it may have belonged to a noble family.

The murals on the walls offer fresh clues and insights into the lives of the people of the area after the demise and disappearance of the Loulan Kingdom.

Zhang paid particular interest to the tomb's long passage, explaining it was a characteristic of tombs which first appeared in the late Western Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD 24). The design later became popular in the East Han Dynasty.

He said tombs of a similar layout have been found in the Turpan area of Xinjiang and in the Dunhuang areas of Northwest China's Gansu Province.

The wooden coffins, with coloured decorations, were not new to Zhang and his colleagues, either. They had seen similar ones in the area five years ago, during an archaeological survey and trial excavation.

Daunting task

When we finished examining the looted tomb, we extended our inspections of the area, eventually covering a 50-kilometre radius around the ruined ancient city of Loulan. What we saw and found dismayed us.

We found graves which had been unearthed, and some badly desecrated, with wooden coffins torn open exposing skeletons, and silk fragments scattered around.

Some of the boards were charred, and we suspected that they had been gratuitously used to make campfires, possibly by the tomb raiders themselves.

We entered two large tombs to find nothing but skeletons and broken coffins.

Yin Baolin, from the local police authority in Bayingolin Mongolia Autonomous Prefecture, and his colleagues travelled with us. They had succesfully investigated a series of lootings in Loulan in 1998 and 2000 from which they accumulated a great deal of relevant experience.

This time, however, Yin and his officers gleaned few clues from the site, making the solving of the case quite difficult.

Around the pillaged tomb, we saw car tracks, some old, others new, which indicated that the tombs had been looted only a few days before we arrived.

On the third day after we reached Lop Nur, we found charred wood, some of which was still smoldering - we had only just missed the tomb raiders.

By following the car tracks, we captured a suspect three hours later. He confessed that he and three accomplices had robbed the tombs. Until a decade ago, the very name of Lop Nur was associated with death. A no-man's land, it was known as a lifeless area spanning nearly 1,000 square kilometres, with the only signs of habitation the occasional red willow and shrivelled reeds which might died years earlier.

Anyone who had tried to enter the area alone was likely to lose their way and perish in the seemingly endless wilderness, whose landscape looks identical as far as the eye can see.

Things changed after petroleum exploration began in the mid-1990s. New roads have been built, and Lop Nur has somehow come alive.

"One only needs a vehicle to travel in Lop Nur," said Yin.

But the advent of technology and man has led to a rising spate of looting of Lop Nur's ancient ruins. The cash profits to be made are enormous with an intact coloured coffin fetching up to a 1 million yuan (US$120,000) in Urumqi, the regional capital, said Yin. The loss to the nation in terms of its cultural heritage is, however, incalculable.

The local cultural relics protection authorities have been working hard to combat the raiders and those who deal in looted artifacts.

Sheng Chunshou, the director of the Cultural Relics Protection Authority in Xinjiang, said he and his colleagues have pressed the regional People's Congress, the local legislature, to introduce new regulations concerning the protection of cultural relics.

One of the important clauses is "Approval from the State and Xinjiang bureaux of cultural heritage is required before entering cultural relics sites which are not open to the public."

Last year, the State Development Planning Commission and the State Administration of Cultural Heritage set up a 1-million yuan (US$120,000) special fund for the protection of Loulan. With the money the regional cultural heritage bureau has helped install satellite telephone systems in the nearby counties and check-points on the major roads. It also plans to build a permanent working station at Loulan.

But as the authorities step up efforts to protect the nation's treasures, those intent on enriching themselves have resorted to subterfuge to enter the area by claiming to be involved in "environmental protection" and "wild life protection," revealed Sheng.

Others have simply entered Loulan from Dunhuang, in neighbouring Gansu Province, roughly the same distance between Lop Nur and Urumqi.

Archaeologists and local police have also found themselves battling evermore sophistically equipped and better financed tomb raiders.

"We have only got to a few sites, where ancient tombs are concentrated," Zhang said. "We have not even been able to go to some sites which Sven Hedin and Marc Aurel Stein visited 100 years ago."

Racing against the tomb robbers, leading archaeologists in the region have worked out a salvage plan to conduct an extensive study of the cultural relics of Xinjiang.

"Where we find we are unable to protect the relics, we may carry out archaeological excavations and salvage the relics before the robbers come," said Sheng.

The plan is now being scrutinized by the State Administration of Cultural Heritage.

Zhang Bai, the administration's deputy director, said that the administration has given due priority to the western regions in its policy making, in line with the country's "go west" strategies.

"Xinjiang comes first," Zhang Bai said.

(China Daily March 24, 2003)

Loulan, Mysterious City in Desert
Expedition Attempts to Unveil Secret of Loulan
4,000-year-old Tombs Re-Discovered in Lop Nur
Print This Page
|
Email This Page
About Us SiteMap Feedback
Copyright © China Internet Information Center. All Rights Reserved
E-mail: webmaster@china.org.cn Tel: 86-10-68326688
主站蜘蛛池模板: 男女一边摸一边做爽爽| 四虎在线视频免费观看视频| 故意短裙公车被强好爽在线播放| 亚洲五月综合网色九月色| 波多野结衣bd| 免费91麻豆精品国产自产在线观看| 老师好长好大坐不下去| 国产呻吟久久久久久久92| 中文字幕色网站| 国产精品综合一区二区三区| AV无码小缝喷白浆在线观看 | 人人妻人人澡人人爽人人精品浪潮| 美女和男生一起差差差| 国产中文欧美日韩在线| 领导边摸边吃奶边做爽在线观看| 国产粗话肉麻对白在线播放| 2021国产麻豆剧果冻传媒电影| 在线观看国产一区| gogo全球高清大胆亚洲| 小向美奈子中出播放| 两性午夜欧美高清做性| 把极品白丝班长啪到腿软| 久久中文字幕无码专区| 日本在线小视频| 久久国产免费一区| 日韩一区二区视频| 久久精品视频16| 日韩高清在线不卡| 久久香蕉国产视频| 日韩视频在线一区| 久久综合九色综合欧美狠狠| 最近最新中文字幕2018| 成人黄色在线观看| 亚洲人成在线播放网站| 欧美亚洲国产成人高清在线| 亚洲国产精品无码久久久| 欧美日韩中文国产一区| 亚洲欧洲日产国码久在线观看 | 新梅金瓶1之爱奴1免费观| 久久九九久精品国产免费直播| 日本理论午夜中文字幕第一页|