Hundreds of artifacts have been unearthed at a burial mound in the city of Chifeng, but researchers are particularly ...
ZHENGZHOU, Oct. 14 (Xinhua) -- A tomb dating back approximately 5,000 years, presumed to be the grave of a prehistoric king, ...
Researchers in China have uncovered a 5,000-year-old jade dragon artifact in a tomb located in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous ...
China on Friday unveiled three important archaeological discoveries of ruins from both the prehistoric age and the Xia ...
The exhibition Sanxingdui Encounter: A 12K Micro-viewing of National Treasures opened on Saturday at the Memor Museum in New ...
The fields of history and archaeology, while fundamentally objective in their pursuit of knowledge about the past, are ...
A tomb dating back 5,000 years, which archaeologists believe may belong to China's first king, has been discovered in central China.
The 5,000-year-old burial site suggests that China’s neolithic kingdoms were more sophisticated than previously thought.
One emerald green jade, roughly the size of one's hand, is the largest of its kind to be unearthed in northern China.
The Hungarian Museum of Ethnography in Budapest opened the highly anticipated exhibition "Fine Dining: Food Stories of Ancient China" on Tuesday, offering visitors a fascinating journey through ...