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Overview of Peking University Seckler Archaeological Art Museum+Tickets+Address+Transportation
In addition to cultural relics exhibitions and daily Chen Zhan, this museum often publicizes some archaeological knowledge to let more people know about that long time. The museum is divided into display parts by years, and the collection types are also very rich, involving dynasties and spanning a very large span. This museum is devoted to teaching.

Admission: free (with valid documents)

Museum address:

Peking University Sackler Archaeological Art Museum, No.5 Summer Palace Road, Haidian District, Beijing.

Traffic information subway:

Peking university east gate subway station exit/entrance a, enter from the northeast gate of Peking university. The walking distance is about 1km.

Yuanmingyuan subway station exit/entrance C, enter from the west gate of Peking University. The walking distance is about 1km.

Bus:

Take 332, 333 (northbound), 333 (southbound), 584, 608, Express 106, Express14, Express 1 18, Express/kloc.

Official website:

/index.htm

Peking University Secler Archaeological Art Museum is the first archaeological museum in China. The museum provides specimen observation and teaching practice conditions for students studying archaeology and museum science in China, actively assists domestic archaeological research and displays domestic archaeological achievements.

The collection includes: stone tools, bronzes, Oracle Bone Inscriptions, pottery, porcelain, calligraphy and painting, inscriptions, etc. The basic exhibition is divided into seven parts: Paleolithic Age, Neolithic Age, Xia, Shang and Zhou Dynasties, Warring States, Qin and Han Dynasties, Sanjin Dynasty, Southern and Northern Dynasties, Sui and Tang Dynasties, Song Dynasty, Liao Dynasty, Jin Dynasty, Yuan Dynasty and Ming Dynasty.

At present, there are tens of thousands of pieces in the collection, most of which are typical specimens of various archaeological periods in China, such as Zhoukoudian Peking Man Stone Tools, representative artifacts of different archaeological cultures in the Neolithic Age, bronzes and jades unearthed from the ancient tombs of the Western Zhou Dynasty in Oracle Bone Inscriptions in Shang Dynasty, as well as pottery, coins, clay seals and folk cultural relics.