City Site in the State of Loulan
The Ancient City of Loulan is located on the west banks of the Lop Nur Lake
in Ruoqiang County, Bayinguole in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.
The city occupied a very significant position on the Silk Road leading to the
West during the Han Dynasty (206BC-AD220) and played an important role in
promoting cultural exchanges between the East and the West. However, the city
was later swallowed up by the desert. There are no historical documents
recording the exact location of the ancient city, which has been buried for
thousands of years. Reputed as the Pompeii in the desert, the city became a
mystery of Chinese history.
In the spring of 1900, the Swedish explorer Sven Hedin accidentally
discovered a huge Buddhist pagoda and the ruins of an ancient city that proved
to be the Ancient City of Loulan. In 1979 and 1980, Xinjiang archaeologists
carried out many excavations at the site.
The Ancient City of Loulan is located 89"55"-89"22" east longitude and
40"45"-40"55" north latitude. The city is an irregular square shape with the
east wall stretching along 333 meters; the south wall, 329 meters; and the west
and north walls, 327 meters each. There are gaps in the center of the south and
north walls that were probably used as gates.
The tallest construction inside the city is a 10.4-meter-high Buddhist pagoda
in the east of the city. The pagoda was built using adobe mixed with timber and
has a square-shaped base about 19.5 meters long on each side. Five kilometers
northwest of the ancient city is a 12-meter-high beacon tower made of clay and
timber.
The most special construction site inside the city is the three-room site
located in the middle. These three rooms are the only structures made from
adobe. Sitting in the north and facing south, the rooms have wooden houses at
their east and west ends. With traces of red paint, some of the timbers are 6.4
meters long. The rooms' location and the architectural style suggest they were
the site of the Loulan government office.
The constructions in the residential area southwest of the city have long
perished. There is an ancient tunnel, however, stretching from the east to the
west through the compound which archeologists believe served as a water source
for Loulan residents.
Ruins of Buddhist temples, a beacon fire and tombs were also unearthed around
the city, including a large number of cultural relics, such as a 5-zhu coin (24
zhu=1 liang, or 0.05 kilograms) from the Han Dynasty, coins from the Tang
Dynasty (618-907), remnants of bamboo slips with Han and Khatoshthi characters,
silk and wool fabrics, lacquers, wooden wares, jade ware, bronze ware and
fragments of glass ware. Many excavated items, which were not made in the
Central Plain areas, provide important materials for the study of the
transportation and cultural exchanges between the East and the West, as well as
the historical relationship between border areas and China's
inland.
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