A Mother and Child’s Eternal Embrace from 4,000 Years Ago

The mother is believed to have been trying to protect her child during a powerful earthquake that hit Qinghai province, central China, in about 2,000 BC.

The remains were dug up on an early Bronze Age archaeological site branded the ‘Pompeii of the East’, the People’s Daily Online reported.

image

Heartbreaking: Skeletal remains show the mother kneeling down on the ground with her arms around her son in central China

image

Clinging on: Another pair of skeletons found at the Chinese archaeological site also appear to be embracing each other

image

image

Tragic: PH๏τographs of the site of devastation were released last week and have touched people across China

Experts believe the site was hit by an earthquake and flooding of the Yellow River, but are yet to understand the exact scale of the disaster.

However, the catastrophe is thought to have wiped out the entire settlement, leading to comparisons with Pompeii – although the site, known as Lajia – is more than 2,000 years older than the ancient Roman city.

PH๏τographs of the skeletal remains show the mother looking up above as she kneels on the floor, with her arms around her young child. Archaeologists say they believe her child was a boy.

Another pair of skeletons were also found locked in an embrace at the same site, this time lying down on the floor.  A number of other remains have also been discovered huddled together.

The remains were dug up on an early Bronze Age archaeological site in Lajia, central China, branded the ‘Pompeii of the East’

image

Lost civilisation: The site holds clues to people living in the early Bronze Age in the upper Yellow River region of China

image

Related Posts

The Warrior’s Rest: Unearthing a Bronze Age Sword and Its Silent Story

So well preserved “it almost still shines” is what archaeologists have termed the incredible find of a 3,000-year-old Bronze Age sword found in the town of Nördlingen,…

Echoes Beneath the Waves: The Forgotten Cargo of the Deep

Nearly 1,000 artifacts including coins and ornate pottery from the Ming Dynasty have been salvaged from two discovered shipwrecks. Nearly 1,000 cultural relics have been recovered from…

Stone Echoes of the Taíno World: A Cemi’s Silent Song

Emerging from the golden sandstone of the Caribbean earth, this figure holds more than form—it holds memory. Carved between the 10th and 15th centuries, when the Taíno…

The Last Supper: A Thermopolium’s Eternal Pulse

In the shadow of Vesuvius, where the ash fell like fatal snow, a humble eatery still serves its ghosts. The thermopolium of Pompeii—part tavern, part street stall,…

The Fallen Colossus: Ramesses II in Repose

Beneath the wide, dust-hazed sky of Memphis, the earth cradles a fallen king. Here lies Ramesses the Great—or what remains of him. His colossal limestone form, once…

Giants of the Forgotten Sky: The Silent Vigil of Mount Nemrut

At dawn, when the first light spills like molten gold over the peaks of southeastern Anatolia, the stone gods of Mount Nemrut stir from their long night….