
Liulihe Ruins is located in Liulihe Town, Fangshan District, Beijing. It was the first capital of the State of Yan during the Western Zhou Dynasty. Since 1962, several generations of archaeologists have discovered the Western Zhou city walls, tombs of princes, and unearthed many exquisite bronze artifacts. The Liulihe Ruins, which is 3,000 years old, is the earliest urban ruins in Beijing.




Liulihe Ruins is located in Liulihe Town, Fangshan District, Beijing. It was the first capital of the State of Yan during the Western Zhou Dynasty. Since 1962, several generations of archaeologists have discovered the Western Zhou city walls, tombs of princes, and unearthed many exquisite bronze artifacts. The Liulihe Ruins, which is 3,000 years old, is the earliest urban ruins in Beijing.
The Western Zhou Yandu Site Museum is the only known site in China of a feudal capital city in the early Western Zhou Dynasty with a clear time period, a city site, a residential area and a burial area. A large number of relics and artifacts have been unearthed, especially exquisite bronzes, lacquerware and inscriptions of great value; showing the glorious early history of the Yan State in front of everyone. The discovery of this site pushed the history of Beijing's founding back to more than 3,000 years ago. Among them, the "Yan State on the Tip of the Tongue" exhibition can make people understand the food and etiquette culture of the Western Zhou Dynasty more than 3,000 years ago.
The Museum of Xizhou Yandu Site in Beijing is a historical and cultural museum that combines ancient cultural sites with cultural relics. It is affiliated to the Beijing Municipal Cultural Relics Bureau. The museum is located in the east of Dongjialin Village, Liulihe Town, Fangshan District, Beijing, outside the east city wall of the Western Zhou Yandu Site. The museum covers an area of 18,000 square meters and the exhibition hall has a construction area of 3,000 square meters. Construction began in 1990 and was officially opened to the public on August 21, 1995. The museum exhibits hundreds of cultural relics, including bronzes, ceramics, jades, lacquered woods, and oracle bones, especially four tombs and chariot pits preserved in their original locations.
Shang and Zhou sites are located in the Liuli River in Fangshan District. Including three parts of residence site, ancient city site and tomb area. This ancient cultural site has been excavated since the early 1970s. Through the analysis and study of the unearthed artifacts, it is recognized that it belongs to the ancient cultural relics of Shang and Tuesday dynasties. The residence site found the houses people lived in at that time, the used cellars, and the relics of the Western Zhou Dynasty, including living utensils and production tools, including pottery, stone, bone, mussel and so on. Relics belonging to the Shang Dynasty were also found in some used ash pits.
Although the area of restaurants available for tourists is not large at present, it is still a museum worth visiting. I believe you will get some results after you go there. When I was checking Liulihe Wanmu Pear Garden the day before, I jumped out of a place on Ctrip. It happened that the museum was close to my destination, so I drove to it. I thought there would be no one. As a result, there were still a lot of people.