The Ancient City of Lu State is located in
Qufu City and its surrounding areas in Shandong Province.
As the capital of the Lu State of the
Zhou Dynasty (11th century - 256BC), the city served as a
capital for the longest period among capitals of various states. During early
Western Zhou, King Wu enfeoffed the Lu State to Duke Zhou, known as Duke Lu. The
son of Duke Zhou set up a capital there during King Cheng's reign. The city
remained the capital till the end of the Lu State, lasting 34 generations for
873 years.
The city remained the enfeoffment of the Lu
State during the Han Dynasty (206BC-220AD) for over 300 years. The ancient city
underwent 8 large-scale renovations through the Western Zhou to the Han, and
later became the seat of a county government. After the seat of the government
was moved to Shouqiu in the Song Dynasty (960-1279), the city was destroyed and
abandoned. A Japanese team surveyed the site and carried out a small-scale
excavation in 1940. Shandong provincial museum conducted comprehensive
excavations at the site during 1977-1978, and revealed the arrangement of the
city.
With a perimeter of 11.9 kilometers, the
ancient city wall was 3.7 kilometers long from east to west, and 2.7 kilometers
wide from south to north. Surrounded by a moat, the city had 3 gates open on the
east, west and north walls each, and 2 gates open in the south wall. The gate
was 7-15 meters wide. The present Qufu City is located in the southwest corner
of the Ancient City of Lu State, occupying about 1/7 of the total area of the
ancient city.
Built in the southwest corner of the ancient
city, the inner city occupied 1/4 of the total area of the big city. In the
center of the inner city was a highland where stood the palace and the royal
ancestral temple. The Duke Zhou Temple, built in the Song Dynasty, still exists
today. Official bureaus, markets and residences scattered around the highland.
Densely arranged workshops for smelting
copper and iron and making bone and pottery wares were built in the north and
west of the city. A burial ground was also discovered in the west part of the
city. Over 100 tombs of the Zhou Dynasty were unearthed, together with wares
made of bronze, pottery, bone, and mussel. These burial objects, with the common
features of the Shang and Zhou cultures, proved that the Lu culture integrated
with the two cultures.
Rich cultural relics were unearthed in the
city site. Over 36 sites have been recognized as key protection areas that
provide valuable data for the historical study of the Zhou Dynasty.