Home>>Life
Last updated at: (Beijing Time) Wednesday, December 10, 2003

2,000-year-old coffin unearthed in Chongqing

A coffin dating back 2,000-2,700 years was unearthed in southwestern China's Chongqing municipality during an excavation for rescuing cultural relics at the Three Gorges area of the Yangtze River.


PRINT DISCUSSION CHINESE SEND TO FRIEND


A coffin dating back 2,000-2,700 years was unearthed in southwestern China's Chongqing municipality during an excavation for rescuing cultural relics at the Three Gorges area of the Yangtze River.

Experts regarded it as the oldest and best-preserved coffin ever found in the region and even in southern China.

This amazing coffin, unearthed from a large-sized tomb, was believed to be built from the later Warring States Period (475 BC-221 BC) to the early Western Han Dynasty (206 b.c.-a.d. 24).

Experts of the prestigious Wuhan Cultural Relics and Archaeology Institute referred to this as a single tomb of Ba people with the body decayed but the gigantic inner and outer coffin remained intact.

A large number of ceramic relics, such as Ding, an ancient cooking vessel with two loop handles and three legs, pots, kettles and other pottery wares have also been found inside the tomb, which provided new evidence for research on the culture of the Warring States Period in this region, according to the experts.


Questions?Comments? Click here
    Advanced








 


US TV dump charges not just a biz spat: Analysis ( 4 Messages)

China not to tolerate splitting Taiwan from motherland: Premier ( 3 Messages)

Trade war? A buying spree for cheap Chinese goods ( 3 Messages)

Moon probe to blast off in 3 years: Chief scientists ( 2 Messages)

Bush strategy: Spend now, pay later? ( 35 Messages)



Copyright by People's Daily Online, all rights reserved