MIL-OSI Russia: The discovery of archaeologists from China and Uzbekistan is included in the list of important achievements in the field of archaeometry and protection of cultural heritage

Translation. Region: Russian Federal

Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

BEIJING, May 28 (Xinhua) — A discovery made by a joint Chinese-Uzbek archaeological team during excavations at the Munchaktepa site in Uzbekistan has been listed as an important achievement in archaeometry and cultural heritage protection, the Chinese Academy of History said on its Weibo microblogging site.

The discovery at the Munchaktepa archaeological site and six other achievements were announced at a press conference organized by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CAS) in Beijing on Tuesday.

The Munchaktepa settlement and burial ground, which were discovered in 1986, are located in the Namangan region of Uzbekistan, on the banks of the Syr Darya River. Since September last year, joint excavations have been conducted by researchers from the Archaeological Institute of the Academy of Social Sciences of China and the State Archaeological Center of the Academy of Sciences of Uzbekistan.

Experts discovered bronze wushu coins /editor’s note: more precisely, wu-zhu, meaning “five zhu”, zhu is a unit of mass in ancient China/, a mirror with arched ornaments, and a fragment of twill brocade.

Let us recall that the coins “wushu” were in circulation in the Celestial Empire from the 2nd century BC to the 7th century. Brocade is a complex patterned artistic and decorative fabric, usually with a silk base with metal threads with gold, silver or materials imitating them in the weft of the fabric. Its production was known at the beginning of our era in China, from where this art passed to the countries of Asia Minor and later to Europe.

According to experts, a fragment of twill brocade found in Uzbekistan indicates that China may have mastered the method of producing such twill fabric a hundred years earlier than previously thought.

The Chinese Academy of Social Sciences said that the results of the research at the Munchaktepa site provide new sources on cultural and material exchanges along the Silk Road from the 3rd to the 6th centuries. -0-

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