A Special Exhibition Celebrating Ningbo's 1,200^th Anniversary
By Dong Na
The special exhibition Convergence—Special Exhibition for the 1,200^th Anniversary of Ningbo's Founding will open at Ningbo Museum, showcasing the origin and development of Ningbo through millennium-old artefacts and giving the public a fresh perspective into the city's 1,200-year history.
He Yufeng, curator of the exhibition department of Ningbo Museum, said that the exhibition brings together 487 artefacts from the Museum itself as well as the Ningbo Cultural Heritage Management Institute, Tianyige Museum, and many other organizations. Many items are being displayed publicly for the very first time.
The exhibition mirrors the layout of Ningbo's earliest downtown area; the partitions represent the city's old inner perimeter walls. To the southeast, there is Tianfeng Tower, even older than the city walls; in the northeast, there is the Heyi Avenue Port; in the northwest, there is the Confucius Temple in Zhongshan Square; and in the southwest, there are the historical sites around Moon Lake.
The 487 artefacts include archeological documents, building parts from historical architecture, porcelain items, religious objects, and cultural relics. These artefacts are the result of more than 40 archaeological excavations in the past 50 years. In addition, there are also over 200 historical photos on display.
Many of the porcelain items were meant to be exported to other countries via the ancient Maritime Silk Road. They prove that not only was Ningbo a center of sophisticated porcelain production, it was also a portal through which porcelain made across China were shipped to the rest of the world.
Also of note are relics excavated from Tianfeng Tower's underground palace. Tianfeng Tower was the tallest building in Ningbo in ancient times. On the lowest level of the Tower's underground palace, a large number of precious Buddhist cultural relics from the Song and Yuan dynasties were found.
Due to its strategic location, for centuries, Ningbo has been a gateway for trade and cultural exchanges between China and the other East Asian countries. Buddhist practices, widely practiced in China, also spread to Japan and Korea. The Baoyun Temple and Yanqing Temple mentioned in the exhibition are testaments to those historical international ties.