Ruins of the capital of Qin State in the late Warring States Period in China. Located at Changling Station, Yaodian Town, Weicheng District, about 15km east of Xianyang City, Shaanxi Province. Qin Xiaogong started construction in the 12th year (350 BC) and moved its capital from Liyang in the 13th year (349 BC). Xianyang City, the capital of the early capital, probably only has Xianyang Palace and the "Jique" building similar to the city gate.
Wang Huiwen continues to expand. According to documents, there are south gate, north gate and west gate in the city. After Qin Shihuang unified the six countries, a new "Six-country Palace" was built. In 206 BC, Xiang Yu entered Xianyang, burned the palace, and Xianyang City was in ruins. Xianyang, just as Qin Dou experienced VII, *** 144, was the political, economic and cultural center of the whole country at that time, and was also the command center for the military unification of the six countries.
Since 1959, Shaanxi Institute of Archaeology and provincial, prefectural and municipal cultural and cultural departments have conducted many explorations and excavations in Xianyang. 1988 People's Republic of China (PRC) * * * and the State Council were announced as national key cultural relics protection units. 2018 065438+124 October, archaeologists discovered a number of large-scale national treasure architectural remains at the site of Xianyang city in Qin.
Dozens of pieces of braided fragments unearthed have inscriptions, which show the scale of Yuefu in Qin Dynasty. The site of Xianyang City in Qin Dynasty is located in the north bank of Weihe River and Yuan Shang, Xianyang, at the east 15km of Xianyang City, Shaanxi Province. Xianyang City was the capital of Qin State during the Warring States Period, and it was also the capital after Qin unified the six countries and established the Qin Dynasty.