Secret History
For a long time, some people held a skeptical attitude toward China's 5,000 years of civilization due to a lack of systematic data. Since its launch in 2001, the project to trace the origins of Chinese civilization has made significant achievements in restoring historical truth, countering skepticism, and presenting new evidence from archaeological excavations and scientific research.
The project has demonstrated how China developed its own unique path toward civilization through its unyielding determination and willpower. Studies have shown that around 5,800 years ago, the development in the complexity of prehistoric societies in the middle and lower reaches of the Yellow River and Yangtze River and the west of Liaohe River basin accelerated, showing signs of the origin of civilization. For example, the Hongshan Culture in the west of Liaohe River basin formed a ceremonial and sacrificial center with stone altars, temples, and tombs, showing clear social differentiation and a theocracy-dominated regional civilization.
Starting 5,300 years ago, various regions in ancient China successively formed early states and entered the first stages of civilization. For example, the Liangzhu culture was characterized by mature rice farming, large-scale construction projects, exquisite pottery, jade wares, ivory scepters and textiles. The vast area had common spiritual beliefs, economic forms and a unified society, which formed the centralized social structure and the initial form of a "monarchy state."
About 4,300 years ago, due to environmental changes and social evolution, the once-prosperous regional civilizations in the Yangtze River and Liaohe River basin declined, while the civilizations in the middle reaches of the Yellow River, like the one around the Taosi site in North China's Shanxi Province, embraced diversified culture and continued to develop, opening a new historical chapter led by the Central Plains. The Taosi site is a large-scale city site with a magnificent palace as well as unearthed cultural relics such as pottery dragon plates, drums, special chimes, jade wares, copper bells, and painted wooden wares. Some researchers theorize that the Taosi site was "Pingyang, the capital of the legendary Chinese Emperor Yao" recorded in ancient books.
Around 3,800 years ago, civilization in the Central Plains region further developed, becoming the core and leader of the overall process of Chinese civilization.
The Erlitou site in Central China's Henan Province revealed a palace foundation composed of halls, courtyards, corridors, and gates. The site is believed to have been the capital of the middle and late Xia Dynasty (c.2070BC-c.1600BC). It is worth noting that the unearthed ritual wares of the Erlitou culture, such as jade wares, pottery wares, and turquoise-inlaid bronze ornaments show that Chinese civilization was entering a dynastic era in which Central Plains region dominated historical development while absorbing and integrating civilizations from all over.
The project has shown that early regional civilizations in China communicated with each other and gradually merged to form a common cultural gene, laying the foundation for the birth of a unified multi-ethnic country. About 6,000 years ago, the spread of painted pottery from the Yangshao Culture, the first culture in China discovered by modern archaeology, throughout the Central Plains shows that vast areas of eastern China had close cultural exchanges.
About 4,500 years ago, the Central Plains region actively absorbed beneficial cultural factors, allowing it to take the lead in cultural development. Wheat, cattle, sheep, and metallurgy native to West Asia were introduced into ancient China, greatly enriching Chinese civilization. About 3,800 years ago, a broad monarchy state centered around the Erlitou culture became the "earliest China," and this influential culture was later inherited by the Shang (c.1600BC-1046BC) and Zhou (1046BC-256BC) dynasties.
The project has raised the definition of civilization and recognized the Chinese approach to decide the standard of a civilized society, namely the development of agriculture and handicraft production, clear class differentiation, the appearance of cities with a formalized hierarchical social order, an increase in population and the emergence of urban centers, and the existence of public power (monarchy) with strong organizational and mobilizing capabilities. This standard is consistent with the characteristics of other civilizations worldwide, making a contribution to the study of world civilization.
In the future, the project will continue to explore unknowns, solve more historical mysteries, and showcase the development path of the Chinese nation and its significant contributions to world civilization, by organizing interdisciplinary efforts, broadening its temporal and spatial scope and deepening international cooperation and comparative research.
Reader Comments
And as the world looks the Great Reset in the eyes, this is exactly the system Bush, Clinton, Obama, and the rest of the world leaders like Trudeau, Macron, King Charles, Committee of 300, Club of Rome, etc. have in store for the rest of us.
Time to start passing around the ammunition - while you still can...
Because truly - tis better to breathe the open air unimpeded in flow.
So, hypothetically - take a Chinese family and put them in Alaska all alone with each other - are they still going to wear masks assuming it is not propaganda? If so, that does not bode well for China. A country with citizens waiting to be told what to do is a country that won't last long because truly countries are of the People that reside within.
I'd rather be in Russia.
pollution BK
I decided to stop wearing masks along time ago and don't plan on ever wearing one again unless I'm working in a dusty environment.
I hope Chinese folks get a clue....I'm pretty sure there are enough pissed off folks around where I reside that we already have gotten the clue.
Big changes on the way - no denying it....big changes on the way.
this country is so out of whack.....it is falling apart.
I worked as a tour guide/ leader in china for a year in 2006..That sounds like it might have been a cool gig. Also, thanks for the insight. Are you familiar with youtubers serpentza and laowhy86? SerpentZA is from South Africa and laowhy86 is from the US and they both lived and worked in China and married Chinese women. They used to travel the country talking about how wonderful China is but over time they started getting more subversive. They left China just as the mainland was taking back control of Hong Kong and they were tipped off the police were looking for them for... subversiveness. Anyway, the reason I ask is half the time I watch one of their videos and I wonder of the Chinese accusations that they are CIA assets is correct, because they certainly seem to have a goal of turning people against China now. Sometimes I also think they might be a bit dim as one of them recently made a video about how de-dollarization is just Chinese propaganda. But folks here know Russia and China have been working on it in earnest for more than a decade and it's not just a psy-op.
If you are familiar, do you think they are deep state assets, or just got enough of a taste of China to realize it's not as great as they romanticized it to be when they arrived to teach English as a second language?
several 'Laowai' friends of mine also married chinese women and lived in china.. they are now back in their respective western homes as they saw the writing on the wall!
Twas a cool gig for sure if you want to live and work in exotic places (for a pittance salary, most of my money was made in tips)..
Every 2 or 3 weeks another group of between 4 and 20ppl would arrive, wash rinse repeat. After 5yrs and various other countries it led to a burn out.
It worked with Egypt!