5,000-Year-Old Shijiahe City Reveals Advanced Ancient Civilization in China
5,000-Year-Old Shijiahe City Unveils Advanced Ancient Civilization

For thousands of years, the remains of a remarkable prehistoric city lay buried beneath the plains of central China, preserving clues to one of the Yangtze River region's earliest urban civilizations. Now, new visitor access and archaeological discoveries are shedding fresh light on the Shijiahe Culture, a sophisticated society that flourished between approximately 3900 and 1800 BCE. Long before the rise of China's first dynasties, the people of Shijiahe built sprawling settlements, engineered complex water-management systems, crafted exquisite jade artifacts, and developed advanced religious traditions. As archaeologists continue to uncover the scale of this ancient urban center, visitors are gaining an unprecedented opportunity to explore a site that is reshaping our understanding of early civilization in East Asia and revealing how complex societies emerged thousands of years ago.

Hidden 5,000-Year-Old City Reveals Advanced Engineering and Urban Planning

Located in present-day Tianmen, Hubei Province, the Shijiahe archaeological site represents one of the largest prehistoric settlements discovered in the middle Yangtze River basin. According to the General Office of Hubei Provincial People's Government, Hubei Province lies in the middle reach of the Yangtze River with an area of 186,000 square kilometers. Situated at 108°21'–116°07' east longitude and 29°05'–33°20' north latitude, it got its name from being north of the Dongting Lake. The terrain of Hubei Province is high in the west and low in the east and wide open to the south, the Jianghan Plain, serving as the political, economic, and cultural center of the Shijiahe Culture.

Archaeological investigations have revealed extensive city walls, residential districts, ceremonial areas, and sophisticated hydraulic infrastructure designed to control water resources and protect the settlement from flooding. The city is enclosed by a rammed wall. Inside it, there are many palace relics. Outside it are the workshop relics and cemeteries. Researchers writing in the journal Antiquity note that the Shijiahe settlement system demonstrates a level of social organization and landscape management that reflects the emergence of an advanced urban society in prehistoric China. The site's scale suggests that it was not merely a village but a regional center capable of coordinating labor, managing resources, and sustaining a large population.

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How the Shijiahe Civilization Mastered Jade, Pottery, and Sacred Rituals

Among the most significant discoveries at Shijiahe are its extraordinary jade artifacts. Archaeologists have uncovered finely crafted ceremonial objects, including intricately carved human and animal figures that demonstrate remarkable artistic skill and specialized craftsmanship. According to Siwei Shan from the Department of Archaeology, School of History, Wuhan University: "Shijiahe represents the highest level of prehistoric civilization development in the middle reaches of the Yangtze River."

The culture also maintained a highly organized pottery industry. Evidence of mass pottery production sites indicates the existence of specialized workshops and advanced production methods. Religion seems to have been an integral part of the civilization. Ritual buildings, evidence of animal sacrifices, and ritualistic objects suggest the existence of organized belief systems and elaborate rituals. This evidence gives important insight into the potential contribution of ritual authority to social and political control in early civilizations.

Why the Shijiahe Site Is Transforming Our Understanding of Ancient China

For decades, discussions of China's earliest civilizations focused primarily on communities associated with the Yellow River basin. However, discoveries at Shijiahe have highlighted the importance of the Yangtze River region as an independent center of cultural innovation and social development. The cultural heritage of humanity is a key source of information regarding mankind's common history. Examples like the Shijiahe site indicate that it was not just one civilization but various civilizations in different regions that played their roles in the evolution of early Chinese society.

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New discoveries from the region prove that China in prehistory had many different and interlinked centers of development instead of being the only cradle of civilization, thus contradicting earlier narratives. As new parts of the site become available for excavation and viewing by visitors and researchers alike, the Shijiahe site becomes one of the few places in the world where one can learn about a civilization that thrived almost five thousand years ago.