Researchers using satellite technology are drawing up maps of
the ancient city of Milan in the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region in a bid to
better protect this important point along the Silk Road.
Milan is home to many cultural relics, including the
world-renowned angel murals carved some 2,000 years ago.
A team of experts from the Beijing Special Engineering Design
Research Institute visited the region surveyed the ruins early this
month.
Using cutting-edge satellite technology, the team gathered
detailed data on the over 40 square kilometre area surrounding the
ruins of Milan, said Lu Hanqian, the senior engineer leading the
team.
"We will work with advanced GPS (global positioning system) to
draw up maps of the ancient city of Milan by the end of the year.
The maps will be the most accurate representations of the ruins
available," the engineer said.
Once the survey and maps are completed, relevant authorities
will implement measures ensuring further restoring and protection
on the ancient ruins, said Sheng Chunshou, director of the Xinjiang
Administration Bureau of Cultural Heritage.
Milan is located in the southern part of Lop Nur in Xinjiang,
over 900 kilometers away from the region's capital, Urumqi. The
city was an important transportation hub during the Western Han
Dynasty (206 BC-24 AD), according to Yang Yiyong, a researcher at
the Xinjiang Archaeology Research Institute.
Yang said Milan was a major stop on the Silk Road, playing a key role in exchanges
between the East and West 2,000 years ago. Milan was gradually
abandoned after the Tang Dynasty (AD 618-907) due to war and
worsening environmental conditions.
In 1907, a British-Hungarian explorer named Aurel Stein found
murals depicting winged angels in the ruins of Milan. In a book on
his travels along the ancient Silk Road, he said that Milan's
angels probably dated back some 2,000 years.
Both Chinese and foreign archaeologists believe that the angel
murals reflect a Roman influence, indicating deep cultural
exchanges between China and the future countries of Europe during
the Western Han Dynasty.
The satellite maps of Milan represent are part of the central
government's efforts to protect local cultural relics and
ruins.
The central government last year drew up a plan entitled "Rescue
and Protection Program of the Key Relics in Xinjiang Along the Silk
Road." Under this project, the government will inject 420 million
yuan (US$52.5 million) in preservation projects over the next five
to eight years, Sheng said.
"There are 21 cultural relics, and ancient sites and ruins in
Xinjiang along the ancient Silk Road listed in the protection
program. We will make maps of other places to be protected in the
following years," Sheng added.
The ancient Silk Road starts in Xi'an, capital of the Western
Han Dynasty, and ends in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. Xinjiang was
an important section along this route spanning the Eurasian
continent, Sheng said.
(China Daily November 23, 2006)