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Some pieces of antique pottery and
porcelain in an underwater excavation of a shipwreck are on display at a
press conference on Tuesday, May 8, 2007. (Xinhua Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
HAIKOU,
May 9 (Xinhua) -- Chinese archaeologists have recovered around 10,000 pieces of
antique pottery and porcelain in an underwater excavation of a shipwreck
believed to date back to the Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279) in the Xisha
Islands in the South China Sea.
The findings provide important evidence of an
established trade route between China and the rest of the world in the 13th
century, according to Zhang Wei, the lead archaeologist for the 55-day
excavation in the Xisha Islands that drew to a close on Tuesday.
"What we found from the shipwreck on Huaguang Reef
No.1 are pearls of the ancient Silk Road on the sea," said Zhang, "and it is
first time we have found such precious antiques in the high seas."
"The fragments serve as a testimony that Chinese
people lived and traded around the Xisha Islands during the Tang (618-907) and
Song (960-1279) Dynasties," Zhang said.
"They also demonstrate that foreign trade during the
Tang and Song dynasties was prosperous and that China was one of the earliest
nations to discover other parts of the world," said Zhang.
The wreck, 20 meters long and six meters wide, was
stumbled upon by a group of Chinese fishermen in 1996, three meters below the
sea water near Huaguang Reef.
According to Zhang, also director of the China
Underwater Research Center with the China National Museum, looters used
explosives to destroy the upper part of the ship in 1996 and the plundering
continued for years.
"Apart from the upper part, the lower part of the
ship is in good shape and the ship might have a displacement of up to 60 tons,"
said Zhang.
"I guess the ship might have sunk on its way from
China to Southeast Asia," said Zhang.
Wang Yiping, deputy director of the Hainan Provincial
Office of Cultural Heritage Administration, believes the ship was made in Fujian
during the Southern Song Dynasty and was used to carry locally produced pottery
for trading overseas.
"We still lack enough evidence to tell us its
destination," said Wang.