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| A colorful dragon head made of clay was found in a palace at Xanadu [Credit: Chinese Cultural Relics] |
Made of fine, red, baked clay the dragon heads would have been attached to the ends of beams and used asdecoration. They "are lifelike and dynamic" and "have yellow, blue, white and black coloring" glazed on them, researchers wrote in a report published recently in the journal Chinese Cultural Relics.
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| The palace where the dragon head was found sprawls over 9,000 square meters [Credit: Chinese Cultural Relics] |
"The site is composed of a palatial district, an imperial city and an outer city, containing remains of three layers of city walls, and occupies an area of 484,000 square meters [about 120 acres]," the archaeologists wrote in their report.
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| Archaeologists found that a special type of ramp allowed horses and vehicles to pass through the palace [Credit: Chinese Cultural Relics] |
While the dragon heads are some of the most eye-catching finds at the palace, archaeologists also discovered a type of ramp called "mandao," meaning "path for the horses" in Chinese which allowed horses and vehicles access to the palace.
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| This image shows eaves and dripstones decorated in blue and yellow designs with images of dragons or birds [Credit: Chinese Cultural Relics] |
The ramps were important because horses and pastoral animals were an essential part of Mongolian life. Recent research suggeststhat an unusually wet climate in Mongolia helped these animals flourish in Genghis Khan's time, helping him and his successors conquer a vast amount of territory.
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| The remains of an artifact depicting a fish head, discovered in the palace at Xanadu, decorated in glazed green and yellow colors the scales still survive [Credit: Chinese Cultural Relics] |
Eave-end tiles and dripstones, "decorated with blue-and-yellow patterns in the shape of dragons or birds," were also found, the archaeologists said. Eave end tiles and dripstones form part of the roof. Aside from being decorative the dripstones helpeddeflect rainwater.
Excavations were conducted at Xanadu in 2009 by a team from Inner Mongolia Normal University, the Inner Mongolian Institute of Cultural Relics, and the Archaeology and Inner Mongolian Institute for Cultural Relics Conservation. The team's report was initially published, in Chinese, in the journal Wenwu. It was translated into English and published in the most recent edition of Chinese Cultural Relics.
Author: Owen Jarus | Source: LiveScience [May 30, 2015]










