"Bronze Age China" Result

The world of archaeology rarely experiences moments that fundamentally rewrite chapters of human history. The 1986 discovery of two sacrificial pits at Sanxingdui, and the subsequent, breathtaking findings from Pits 3 through 8 between 2020 and 2022,
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In the heart of China's Sichuan Basin, far from the traditional cradle of Chinese civilization along the Yellow River, a discovery in the late 20th century shattered long-held historical narratives. The Sanxingdui ruins, near the modern city of Guang
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The quiet countryside of Guanghan, in China's Sichuan province, has become the epicenter of an archaeological revolution. For decades, the Sanxingdui ruins hinted at a lost civilization, but the recent excavations of six new sacrificial pits (Pits No
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The story of Chinese civilization, long narrated through the familiar lens of the Yellow River and its dynastic chronicles, has been irrevocably complicated—and magnificently enriched—by a series of earth-shattering discoveries in a quiet corner of S
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The very earth of Sichuan seems to whisper secrets. For millennia, the story of China's cradle of civilization was told along the Yellow River, with the Shang Dynasty and its oracle bones serving as the protagonists. Then, in 1986, a discovery in a q
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The story of China's ancient civilization has long been told through a familiar narrative: the Yellow River as the singular "Cradle of Chinese Civilization," home to the dynastic lineage of Xia, Shang, and Zhou. This story, supported by centuries of
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The story of Chinese civilization, long narrated through the orderly lens of the Central Plains dynasties, was irrevocably altered in 1986. In a quiet corner of Sichuan province, near the city of Guanghan, archaeologists unearthed not just artifacts,
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The mist-shrouded plains of Guanghan, in China's Sichuan province, have long whispered secrets of a forgotten past. For nearly a century, since a farmer’s serendipitous discovery in 1929, the Sanxingdui ruins have consistently defied expectations, re
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The story of human civilization is often told through the well-trodden paths of the Nile, the Indus, the Tigris and Euphrates, and the Yellow River. For centuries, Chinese history was understood through a Central Plains-centric narrative, with the Sh
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The story of Sanxingdui is not a linear narrative but a series of seismic shocks to our understanding of Chinese and human civilization. For decades, history textbooks centered on the Yellow River as the sole cradle of Chinese culture. Then, from the
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Sophia Reed
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