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Imperial gravestones unearthed in NE China
( 2003-12-05 11:30) (Xinhua)

Chinese archeologists have unearthed three tombstone remnants in northeast China that are believed to  have belonged to the imperial family of Jin Dynasty some 800 years ago.

The tombstones, whose inscriptions included Chinese characters  representing several rulers of the Jin Dynasty (1115-1234),  including Wanyan Aguda and Wanyan Xiyin, could have belonged to  the Wanyan family itself, according to experts with the Acheng  Institute of prestigious Harbin Normal University in Heilongjiang  province.

The three tombstones, all apparently damaged by man, were  discovered in what was believed by experts to be the family's  burial ground with a group of seven tombs near Jixingtun village  in Daling township, Acheng city, close to the headwaters of Haigou River, where the Jin Dynasty was originated.

On the burial ground lay numerous pieces of tiles, stones and  other building materials that were often spotted in architectures  from the Jin Dynasty, said archeologists.

Experts noted that these were the first Jin tombstones to be  excavated around the city of Harbin, which abounds in aristocratic tombs and was once the foothold of the Jin army.

Earlier reports noted that four Jin tombstones had been  discovered, one in Russia and the three others in Jilin province  neighboring Heilongjiang.

Wanyan Aguda proclaimed himself the founder and first emperor  of the Jin Dynasty in 1115 that toppled the Liao Empire (916-1125) through long years of war. Jin was defeated in 1234 by the rising  Mongol nomads, who later founded the imperial Yuan Dynasty (1271- 1368).

 
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