Large 3,000-year-old bronze production site unearthed

Source: Xinhua| 2020-04-06 19:47:56|Editor: huaxia

ZHENGZHOU, April 6 (Xinhua) -- Chinese archeologists said they have discovered the largest bronze production site ever known during the late Shang Dynasty (about 1,600 BC-1,046 BC) in the central province of Henan.

In an excavated area of 4,000 square meters, several independent bronze casting workshops integrating bronze dissolving, casting and polishing have been discovered, said Kong Deming, deputy head of the Cultural Heritage Bureau of Anyang City.

A number of large bronze ritual vessels and casting molds have also been unearthed, he added.

The bronze relic site accounted for more than 50 percent of the total of 1 million square meters of the Xindian relic site. Nearly 12,000 pieces of molds and furnaces have been excavated at the site.

The Xindian archaeological site was discovered in 2016. The site is about 10 km away from the core area of the ruins of Yin, the last capital of the Shang Dynasty.

Latest archaeological findings showed the core area of the Xindian site had five separate bronze production areas which each had special zones for workshops, living, sacrifice and tombs, Kong said.

"These findings are of significance to the study of the bronze casting craft in the late Shang Dynasty as well as the construction and layout of relevant facilities," Kong said.

Forty-six ritual bronze vessels have been unearthed from the tombs in the bronze site.

The large-scale Xindian relic site was the most important town 10 km from the core Yinxu area and closely related to the development of the Shang capital, according to Kong.

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