摘要
In the spring of 1998, the Feng-Hao Excavation Team, IA, CASS, revealed three large-sized tombs and a horse-and-chariot burial pit to the north of Dayuan Village in the Fengxi area of Chang' an County, Shaanxi Province. The tombs are all wooden-chambered rectangular earthen pits. Of them M5 and M6 left over only chambers and below, while M4 is a little better in condition. Despite their robbery, these graves yielded some pottery, bronze, jade, stone and bone articles, mainly bronzehorse-and-chariot fittings, jades and ornaments. M5 and M6 go back roughly to the later Spring-and-Autumn period, whereas M4 should be dated to the Western Zhou period, from the Yiwang to the Liwang reigns. They are close to each other in location and must have belonged to the common graveyard of an aristocratic family.
In the spring of 1998, the feng-Hao Excavation Team, IA, CASS, revealed three large-sized tombs and a horse-and-chariot burial pit to the north of Dayuan Village in the Fengxi area of Chang' an County, Shaanxi Province. The tombs are all wooden-chambered rectangular earthen pits. Of them M5 and M6 left over only chambers and below, while M4 is a little better in condition. Despite their robbery, these graves yielded some pottery, bronze, jade, stone and bone articles, mainly bronze horse-and-chariot fittings, jades and ornaments. M5 and M6 go back roughly to the later Spring-and-Autumn period, whereas M4 should be dated to the Western Zhou period, from the Yiwang to the Liwang reigns. They are close to each other in location and must have belonged to the common graveyard of an aristocratic family.
出处
《考古》
CSSCI
北大核心
2004年第9期39-44,共6页
Archaeology