Chinese archaeologists on Saturday unearthed two good-sized
stone chimes, an ancient musical instrument, dating back to the
Shang Dynasty (16th-11th centuries BC) in the southwestern province
of Sichuan.
The bigger one of the two stone chimes, which is about 110 cm
long and the largest of all Shang stone chimes ever excavated, was
found in the Jinsha Ruins in the suburbs of Chengdu, capital of
Sichuan and about 2,200 kilometers southwest of Beijing.
Small holes were drilled in the stone chime, which is in an
elliptic shape, so that it could be suspended from a frame. The
other smaller stone chime, unearthed together with the big one, has
two string lines.
"Stone chimes served as special musical instruments at imperial
rituals in the Shang age, and it is the first time to find stone
chimes in southwest China," said Wang Yi, director of Chengdu
Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology.
"The two stone chimes show that the Shang people had fairly
complete rites and music system for the activity of sacrifice," he
said, adding that the performance must have been quite spectacular
because the size of the stone chimes is so big.
(Xinhua News Agency June 11, 2006)