China stages exhibition to show cultural exchanges along Silk Road
By Qu Song, People’s Daily
An exhibition of treasures from national museums of
12 countries along the Silk Road was staged at the National Museum of China in Beijing on April 11.
Featuring 234 items of relics, the exhibition
displays the stories of cultural exchanges along the land and maritime Silk
Roads.
The exhibition aims to provide an opportunity for
people across the world to share the diversity of human civilization, said Wang
Chunfa, curator of the National Museum of China.
By displaying the fusion of arts and skills of the
countries along the Belt and Road, the exhibition promotes Silk Road spirit and
reveals the future trend of the world – the building of a community of shared
future for mankind, Wang remarked.
Visitors
watch cultural relics from Russia at the exhibition. (Photo/People’s Daily
Online)
The exhibition is divided into two sections: the
land Silk Road and maritime Silk Road, introducing cultural relics from 13
countries including China, Cambodia, Japan, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Mongolia, Oman,
Poland, Republic of Korea, Romania, Russia, Slovenia, and Tajikistan.
The relics include both national historic treasures and exotic items that carry the history of
trade and cultural exchanges along the ancient Silk Road.
According to the exhibition, China started exchanges
with the western Eurasia as early as in the prehistoric age. The artifacts of
Turbino culture that originated from Russia are reliable evidences. They have
been found multiple times in northwest China’s Gansu and Qianghai provinces as
well as central China’s Henan province. The barbed spear of Turbino culture collected
by the National Museum of China and the leaf-like spear sent from Russia resembled
with each other.
The eastern section of the Silk Road was unclogged
by Emperor Wu of Western Han Dynasty (206 BC-9 AD) in the late 2nd century BC,
and the channel was later joined by the Roman Empire from the western end.
During a long period of history, the Silk Road
served as a relatively safe and effective channel for trade and cultural
exchanges between the east and the west. Ever since, the communication and
exchanges between the two parts of the world kept on.
A Chinese-style porcelain plate made by Iran now
collected by the National Museum of Poland is a record of the trade and
cultural exchanges along the Silk Road.
Such record can also be reflected by a Chinese cup
manufactured in the Tang Dynasty (618-907) unearthed in Latvia which, according
to experts, may have traveled all the way through Central Asia,Bulgaria, and Scandinavia through trade, and ended up
onto the shore of the Baltic Sea.
In 1913, Edouard Chavannes, a renowned French
sinology, proposed the concept of maritime Silk Road for the first time. The
maritime trade channel is also called maritime porcelain road and maritime
spice road as porcelain and spice were the major goods traded along the route.
A plaque carved with the language of Hadhramaut
collected by the National Museum of Oman recorded the booming frankincense
trade of the kingdom of Ḥaḍramawt at that time.
The history of the Silk Road still has a profound
influence even today, said the National Museum of Korea in the foreword of the
exhibition.
All regions covered by the network could eliminate
misunderstanding, live in harmony and achieve common prosperity through communication
and cooperation, and the Silk Road is a core concept that helps the Republic of
Korea, China and Japan, all situating at the eastern end of the Silk Road, understand
the cultural traditions of each other, foreword of the exhibition.
In Nov. 2018, the National Museum of China hosted
the First Conference of the International Alliance of Museums of the Silk Road,
and signed a cooperation agreement under the proposal of Chinese President Xi
Jinping, said Wang.
The exhibition, as a concrete step to implement
the agreement, will last until July 14, 2019, Wang added.
China stages exhibition to show cultural exchanges along Silk Road
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