The Remarkable History of Sanxingdui Ruins

Step back over 3,000 years to uncover the mysterious origins and evolution of the Ancient Shu civilization. From the stunning discovery of the Sanxingdui Ruins to the groundbreaking archaeological findings that rewrote China’s Bronze Age history, explore how this lost culture shaped the spiritual and artistic identity of early Sichuan.

History

The story of human civilization is often told as a neat, linear narrative. We have Mesopotamia, the Nile, the Indus Valley, and the Yellow River. We chart the rise and fall of dynasties, the spread of technologies, and the evolution of artistic style
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The story of Chinese civilization, long narrated through the familiar lens of the Yellow River Valley, was irrevocably altered one spring day in 1986. In a quiet, rural corner of Sichuan Province, near the modern city of Guanghan, local workers excav
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The story of ancient China, long narrated through the lens of the Central Plains and the Yellow River Valley, received a seismic plot twist in 1986. In a quiet corner of Sichuan Province, near the city of Guanghan, archaeologists made a discovery so
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The story of human civilization is often told as a linear, familiar narrative. We speak of Mesopotamia, the Indus Valley, the Yellow River—cradles from which cultures grew in recognizable patterns. Then, a pit of bronze masks with dragon-like ears an
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The story of human civilization is often told through the lens of the familiar—the pyramids of Egypt, the cities of Mesopotamia, the valleys of the Indus. We map history along known rivers and well-trodden trade routes. Then, a discovery comes along
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For decades, the narrative of early Chinese civilization flowed like a mighty, singular river from the Yellow River basin. The dynasties of Xia, Shang, and Zhou formed the bedrock of historical understanding, their bronze ritual vessels and oracle bo
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The story of ancient China, as traditionally told, often flows like a mighty river from the Yellow River Valley—the cradle of the Xia, Shang, and Zhou dynasties. Their oracle bones, ritual bronzes, and majestic tombs have long defined our understandi
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For decades, the story of early Chinese civilization was a tale told by the Yellow River. The narrative was linear and centered: from the legendary Xia to the bronze-casting Shang and the ritualistic Zhou, Chinese culture seemed to have a single, mig
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The story of human civilization is often told through the well-trodden paths of the Nile, the Indus Valley, the Yellow River, and the Mediterranean. Our history books are filled with the familiar faces of pharaohs, emperors, and philosophers. But wha
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The story of Chinese civilization, long narrated as a linear progression along the Yellow River basin—from the legendary Xia to the majestic Shang and Zhou dynasties—was irrevocably complicated one spring day in 1986. In a quiet village in Guanghan,
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Sophia Reed
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