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Jinsha Ruins "Circle of Friends"

Jinsha Ruins "Circle of Friends"
Jinsha Ruins "Circle of Friends"

Liangzhu, Erlitou, Sanxingdui, Jinsha and other important sites not only constitute the "starry sky" on the eve of Chinese civilization, but also serve as "circle of friends" for each other, forming a pattern of pluralism and integration of Chinese civilization.

As archaeologist Su Bingqi proposed in the 1980s, the evolution of China's prehistoric culture is not a one-line, but pluralistic, or "starry sky". Su Bingqi creatively established the civilization theory of "full of stars and buckets" and established a systematic understanding of Chinese civilization. Since then, a series of major archaeological discoveries in China, such as Liangzhu, Tao Temple, Erlitou, Shijia, Sanxingdui, Jinsha and other important sites, not only constitute the "starry sky" on the eve of Chinese civilization, but also form a "circle of friends" for each other, forming a pattern of pluralism and integration of Chinese civilization.

Jinsha Ruins "Circle of Friends"

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