The Fenghao Site is located along both sides
of the Feng River, 12 kilometers southwest to Xi'an City of Shaanxi
Province.
Fenghao is a combination name for
Fengyi and Haojing, set by Kings Wen and Wu of the Zhou Dynasty (11th
century - 256BC), respectively. With Fengyi located on the west bank of the
Fengshui River and Haojing on the east bank, the site covers a total area of 10
square kilometers, spreading a large area including Kesheng Village, Mawang
Village, Zhangjiapo, Xinwang Village, Fengcun Village, Luoshui Village, Pudu
Village, Doumen Town and Kunmingchi. After an archaeological investigation in
1933, the Archaeology Research Institute of the Chinese Academy of Social
Science has carried out a lasting excavation on the site since 1951.
Fenghao was then the political, economic and
cultural center of the Western Zhou Dynasty. According to the record in
Kaogong Notes, the city covered an area of nine kilometers, with three
gates open on each side. Inside the city, nine streets lied vertically while
another nine streets horizontally. With the palace built in the center, the
ancestral temple on the left, the sacrificial site on the right, imperial court
in the front, and downtown streets in the back, the city had presented a general
reference rule for overall arrangement. It is obvious that rulers at that time
had already got a planning mind to build up an orderly-arranged city.
An imperial palace site was unearthed near
Manwang Village and Luoshui Village, together with a number of drainage parts,
such as pipeline and tile. Besides, 20 residential sites, built in cave or
half-pit houses, cellars and wells were also excavated in the site.
More than 400 hundred tombs and sacrificial
pits for carriages, horses and cattle buried with the dead were unearthed. In a
pit discovered in Kesheng Village on the west bank of the Fengshui River, the
sacrificial carriages included a four-horse-drawn chariot and a two-horse-drawn
covered wagon, both decorated with bronze ornaments of fine work. This is
sacrificial pit belonging to a slave-owner.
Among unearthed sites were many cellars that
used as secret storage places by slave-owners and lords of the late Zhou Dynasty
to bury bronze sacrificial vessels when they escaped from the city. About 100
vessels were excavated in these cellars, including 53 vessels in Zhangjiapo,
among which 32 had inscriptions, and 25 vessels in Mawang Village, 10 of which
had inscriptions. Those inscriptions, which have high historical, artistic and
academic values, recorded some important history events of the Western Zhou
Dynasty and neighboring states.