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Skywizard
25th November 2014, 18:12
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A cemetery dating back around 1,700 years has been discovered in Kucha, a city in China.
The city played an important role along the Silk Road trade routes that connected China to the
Roman Empire.

A cemetery dating back roughly 1,700 years has been discovered along part of the Silk Road, a series of ancient trade routes that once connected China to the Roman Empire.

The cemetery was found in the city of Kucha, which is located in present-day northwest China. Ten tombs were excavated, seven of which turned out to be large brick structures.

One tomb, dubbed "M3," contained carvings of several mythical creatures, including four that represent different seasons and parts of the heavens: the White Tiger of the West, the Vermilion Bird of the South, the Black Turtle of the North and the Azure Dragon of the East.

The M3 tomb also "consists of a burial mound, ramp, sealed gate, tomb entrance, screen walls, passage, burial chamber and side chamber" the researchers wrote in a report published recently in the journal Chinese Cultural Relics.

The cemetery was first found in July 2007 and was excavated by the Xinjiang Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology, with assistance from local authorities. The research team, led by Zhiyong Yu, director of the Xinjiang Archaeological Institute, published the findings in Chinese in the journal Wenwu. The article was recently translated into English and published in the journal Chinese Cultural Relics.

The identity of the people buried in the cemetery is a mystery. The cemetery had been robbed in the past and no writing was found that indicates the names of those buried or their positions in life.

The seven large brick tombs were likely constructed for people of wealth, the researchers said.

But, when the skeletal remains were analyzed, the researchers found that the tombs had been reused multiple times. Some of the tombs contain more than 10 occupants, and the "repeated multiple burials warrant further study," the researchers wrote.

The excavators think the cemetery dates back around 1,700 years, to a time when Kucha was vital to controlling the Western Frontiers (Xiyu) of China. Since the Silk Road trade routes passed through the Western Frontiers, control of this key region was important to China’s rulers.

"In ancient times, Kucha was called Qiuci in Chinese literature. It was a powerful city-state in the oasis of the Western Frontiers" the researchers wrote.

For the dynasties that flourished in China around 1,700 years ago "the conquest and effective governance of Kucha would enable them to control all the oasis city-states in the Western Frontiers," the researchers said.

In fact, one ancient saying was, "if you have Kucha, only one percent of the states in the Western Frontiers remain unsubmissive."



Source: http://news.discovery.com/history/archaeology/ancient-mythical-carvings-found-in-silk-road-cemetery-141125.htm



peace...

Agape
28th November 2014, 21:49
I was looking for the location of this place and it's found in one of those off-limit areas of Xinjiang region that was forcibly 'added' , captured by China during their last century 'liberation' of Tibet ,
the natives of the area are known as Uighurs .

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-30243713

China's Xinjiang to hire 3,000 ex-soldiers as guards


The capital of China's restive region of Xinjiang will recruit 3,000 former soldiers to help guard its residents, the Chinese government has said.

The soldiers will be carefully vetted to determine their political views. They will join the military and police forces that often patrol Urumqi.

The move comes amid a crackdown against the Uighur Muslim minority group.

China has blamed a spate of violent attacks in Xinjiang on Uighurs pushing for the region's independence.

The BBC's Celia Hatton says that tensions have been on the rise in Xinjiang, where 175 people have died so far this year in clashes between Uighurs and the Han Chinese majority, according to China's state media.

This is a huge increase on the same period last year when 45 people were killed.
'Foreign terror links'
This is the first time former soldiers have been asked by China to guard Urumqi.

Those applying for the role must be under 30, have left the army within the past year and prove that they are "against separatism and illegal religious activities," our correspondent says.

Xinjiang's recruitment office told the BBC it is yet to receive many applications.
Chinese authorities have arrested more than 300 people on suspicion of terrorism in Xinjiang in the past six months.

They claim that Uighur extremists are inspired and supported by overseas terror groups.

But the Uighurs claim that Beijing exaggerates the threat they pose to justify repressive policies.

Confirming reports about incidents in Xinjiang is difficult, because access is tightly controlled and information flow restricted.

There have been several high-profile, organised attacks on Xinjiang civilians that have left dozens of people dead.

In July the worst incident of violence killed 96 people in Xinjiang's county of Yarkant.

Chinese state media said it was a "terror attack" but activists say police opened fire on people protesting against a Ramadan crackdown on Muslims.



http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/nov/25/china-tries-seven-students-separatist-charges-uighur

China tries seven students on separatist charges




:tape:


http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/nov/28/china-media-watchdog-bans-wordplay-puns


China bans wordplay in attempt at pun control


:tape: