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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Culture -> 
Ancient water city archaeological site found in Jiangsu
    2022-09-27  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

THE ruins of a large ancient water city traced back to around 2,500 years ago were found in East China’s Jiangsu Province.

The Wujiabang Ruins were located 10 kilometers away from one of China’s largest freshwater areas, Taihu Lake, and as the rivers and streams connected every corner of the city, experts believe that “waterways were the citizens’ main way of transportation instead of solid roads.”

“It’s supposed to be a water city,” said Li Guangri, deputy director of the Wuxi Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology. “Rivers crisscrossed the city at the time, making waterways a common transportation mean for the locals. When they got out of the house, they went on a boat,” Li added.

The experts dated the city as belonging to the Spring and Autumn Period (770–476 B.C.). Covering an area of 800,000 square meters, the Wujiabang Ruins included an inner city, an outer city and an outskirt area. The inner city, covering an area of 83,000 square meters, was shielded by walls on the west and south sides, and was protected by moat on the east and north sides.

One noticeable thing was that archaeologists found 99 wells in the inner city, suggesting “a considerable amount of population at the time in Wujiabang,” added Li.

However, as each well had only an average of 5-meter depth, “these wells were not the ordinary deep wells that we see in everyday life considering their shallow depth. And how the ancient people actually used them also needs to be further studied,” said Prof. Li Xiaojie of the Center for Historical Geography of Fudan University.

“At another ruin site located in the middle reaches of the Yellow River, archaeologists discovered that every household had their own well as a basic living supply, so it cannot be ruled out that the Wujiabang Ruins site may present a similar arrangement,” he added.

The discovery of Wujiangbang Ruins was accidental. At the end of 2019, local farmers found scattered pottery relics when they were digging a ditch. The Wuxi Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology conducted a massive excavation in the following year and found the remains of city walls, pottery kitchen ware and porcelains.

In a corner which the archaeologists believed to be the living area, there are traces of ashes, an empty hollow which is supposed to be a pillar supporting the house and two wells. Next to the ashes, archaeologists also found kitchen ware made of pottery and porcelain. The archaeological team said that as the excavation is still underway, two more remains of “high-level architecture” are yet to be revealed.

The ruins are located inside the Hongshan Ruins Archaeological Park in Wuxi, which once amazed the archaeological world with its hundreds of tombs owned by high-rank nobles. However the identities of the tombs’ owners remain unknown.

“The discovery of the Wujiabang Ruins not only provides more clues for us to study the source of Wuyue culture, but it may also give some more clues about the owners of those noble tombs,” noted Liu Baoshan, director of the Wuxi Institute of Archaeology.

(Global Times)

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