A large number of drinking vessels recently excavated at Yuchi Temple, south China's Anhui Province, show the Chinese may have been making wine 5,000 years ago, almost 1,000 years before it was previously known.
The Yuchi Temple site in Mengcheng county dates back about 5,000 years and belongs to the later period of the Dawenkou Culture (4000 B.C.- 2600 B.C.), a cultural era of the late New Stone Age.
"Before the excavation of the Yuchi Temple site, it was generally believed by archaeologists that China's wine culture began in the Longshan Culture, a cultural era nearly 500 years after the Dawenkou Culture," said Wang Jihuai, a research fellow with the Institute of Archaeology of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
"But from the great quantity of drinking vessels unearthed at Yuchi Temple, we can draw the conclusion that in south China nearly 5,000 years ago, the wine culture was already popular. It advances the birth of wine-making in China by nearly 1,000 years,” Wang said.
So far, over 20 types of drinking vessels not only of different shapes, but also of different quality have been unearthed at YuchiTemple prehistoric site.
A 15-centimeter-tall goblet of excellent workmanship drew the attention of the archaeologists. With a mouth as large as that of a glass of today, the earthen goblet is described as "eggshell" because of the thin sides.
"The goblet must have been used by somebody of high consequence and it is very rare even among the vessels unearthed so far," said Wang.
As one of the best preserved and biggest cultural relics of the New Stone Age, the Yuchi Temple site was a village or castle of the leader of a tribal confederacy in the late Patri-clan period. Covering more than 100,000 square meters, over 10 percent of the site has been unearthed since excavations began in 1989.
(Xinhua News Agency November 27, 2003)
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