Two Warring States period tombs found in Anhui

Two large-scaled tombs were recently discovered at a construction site in Lu'an city of East China's Anhui Province. It is regarded as the biggest archaeological find in the province since 2009. 


The two tombs are oriented east and west and lie abreast, 20 meters away from each other. The local archaeological team started the excavation on the north tomb, which is apparently smaller, from April 1st and has successfully opened the chamber. There are three layers of coffins in the chamber, which is very rare in past finds, and the whole structure is solid and intact. 


Archaeologists estimate that the two tombs belong to the Kingdom Chu of the Warring States Period. Fortunately, the tombs appear not to have been damaged over the past 2200 years. 


Wang Xin, Captain of Lu'an Archaeological Team, said, "From the funeral chamber arrangement and the excavated relics, we assume that the tombs were from the mid years of the Warring States. During that period coffins were usually covered by chambers and they were buried deeper than those from the Han Dynasty." 


More than 1100 bronze vessels, ceramic worship objects, and porcelain have been discovered in the smaller tomb. Archaeologists presume it belonged to a woman.