Thank you Chenzhu!
Zuojiang Huashan Rock Art Cultural Landscape
UNESCO site
Date of Insscription: 2016
Dating from around the 5th
century BCE to the 2nd century CE, 38 sites of rock art and their associated
karst, riverine and tableland landscape depict ceremonies that have been
interpreted as portraying the bronze drum culture once prevalent across
southern China. Located on steep cliffs cut through the karst landscape by the
meandering Zuojiang River and its tributary Mingjiang River, the pictographs
were created by the Luoyue people illustrating their life and rituals.
Criterion (iii): The Zuojiang
Huashan Rock Art Cultural Landscape, with its special combination of landscape
and rock art, vividly conveys the vigorous spiritual and social life of the
Luoyue people who lived along the Zuojiang River from the 5th century BCE to
the 2nd century CE. It is now the only witness to the tradition.
Criterion (vi): The images of
Zuojiang Huashan depicting drums and related elements are symbolic records
directly associated with the bronze drum culture once widespread in the region.
Today bronze drums are still respected as symbols of power in southern China...
Source: unesco.org
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