The Jinan City of the Chu State is
located 5 kilometers north to Jiangling County in Hubei Province.
The
Jinan City was the capital of State of Chu
of the Spring and Autumn (770-476BC) and Warring States (475-221BC) periods. It
was called Yingdu then and was also known as Jiying for its location to the south
of Jishan Mountain. It first gained its name of Jinan in the notes of Zuo
Zhuan
written by Du Yu, a scholar of the Western Jin Dynasty (265-316). The city was the
capital of the Chu State from the first year (689BC) of King Wen's reign in
the Chu State and remained so till the 21st year (278BC) of
King Qingxiang's reign when Bai Qi, a Qin captain, captured the city, lasting
20 generations in 411 years. During this period, the Chu State conquered about
50 small states and reched its peak. The territory of the Chu State stretched
northward to the Yellow River, eastward to the seashore, westward to Yunnan, and
southward to southern Hunan, while Jinan City became the political, cultural and
economic center of the Chu State as well as the largest city in the south.
The large-scale Jinan City Site is 4.5
kilometers long from east to west and 3.5 kilometers wide from south to north,
covering an area of 16 square kilometers. The city wall, made of tampered earth,
has a perimeter of 15.5 kilometers, with remains of 6.7 meters high found in
some sections. 7 gates were opened on the four sides. The unearthed north gate
in the west wall has three gateways and buildings resembling gatehouses on both
sides. Two floodgates were open at the exit of ancient river courses built in
the south and the north walls.
Built inside the city were densely
constructed tampered-earth foundations, high or low, with the highest one of 6
meters. Ancient wells and kilns were scattered inside the city site, together
with a number of construction materials such as pantiles and flat tiles and
cultural relics of the Eastern Zhou period. Houses of the East Zhou period that
unearthed in the southeast part of the city have a wall base of 60 meters long
and 14 meters wide. After the capital of Chu was moved to Chen (today's Huiyang
City in Henan Province), Fenghuang Hill, located inside the city, became the
burial ground during Qin and Han periods. The famous body of the Western Han
Dynasty was excavated here, together with a number of bamboo slips and finely
painted lacquers
Besides, three large burial grounds were
discovered beyond the city site, with over 700 large- and medium-sized
tombs for the royals and nobles of the Chu State. Jinan City was abandoned
after Bai Qi captured it.