考古
攷古
고고
Archaeology
2000年
7期
1~12
,共null页
河南 偃师商城宫城 “大灰沟” 中国 考古学
河南 偃師商城宮城 “大灰溝” 中國 攷古學
하남 언사상성궁성 “대회구” 중국 고고학
The “large ash trench” is a trench-shaped remains stretching from west to east in the north of the palace city of the Shang city in Yanshi and measuring 110m in length and 14m in width. Its excavation in 1996--1997 revealed a series of cultural layers with ideal stratigraphic evidence and plentiful objects. The discovery laid a solid foundation for the pcriodization of the remains in the Shang Yanshi city, providing a three-phase seven-subphase chronological frame for the early Shang vestiges in the city, with the first and second phases represented by the main deposits in the trench. Furthermore, it affords reliable material to the study of the Xia and Shang cultures and their chronology, enriching our knowledge of the early Shang culture represented by the Erligang remains, substantiating the contents between the Erligang period and the Erlitou culture, and advancing the research on the turn from the Xia to the Shang dynasties and the demarcation between their cultures.
The “large ash trench” is a trench-shaped remains stretching from west to east in the north of the palace city of the Shang city in Yanshi and measuring 110m in length and 14m in width. Its excavation in 1996--1997 revealed a series of cultural layers with ideal stratigraphic evidence and plentiful objects. The discovery laid a solid foundation for the pcriodization of the remains in the Shang Yanshi city, providing a three-phase seven-subphase chronological frame for the early Shang vestiges in the city, with the first and second phases represented by the main deposits in the trench. Furthermore, it affords reliable material to the study of the Xia and Shang cultures and their chronology, enriching our knowledge of the early Shang culture represented by the Erligang remains, substantiating the contents between the Erligang period and the Erlitou culture, and advancing the research on the turn from the Xia to the Shang dynasties and the demarcation between their cultures.
The “large ash trench” is a trench-shaped remains stretching from west to east in the north of the palace city of the Shang city in Yanshi and measuring 110m in length and 14m in width. Its excavation in 1996--1997 revealed a series of cultural layers with ideal stratigraphic evidence and plentiful objects. The discovery laid a solid foundation for the pcriodization of the remains in the Shang Yanshi city, providing a three-phase seven-subphase chronological frame for the early Shang vestiges in the city, with the first and second phases represented by the main deposits in the trench. Furthermore, it affords reliable material to the study of the Xia and Shang cultures and their chronology, enriching our knowledge of the early Shang culture represented by the Erligang remains, substantiating the contents between the Erligang period and the Erlitou culture, and advancing the research on the turn from the Xia to the Shang dynasties and the demarcation between their cultures.