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Are ancient gold and silver jewelry cultural relics?
In recent years, popular time-travel dramas include Walking on Thin Ice and Time-travel Drama's Ancestor Palace. Through these time-travel dramas, we can sum up a rule that the protagonist must be a history lover or a cultural relic lover, otherwise why did you come back? Do you think people can cross, cultural relics or modern things? Maybe you can. Otherwise, how can there be the following cultural relics that look like crossing back?

Women's satchels in Tang Dynasty in Mogao Grottoes Nowadays, girls like handbags just as boys like sneakers. There is a saying circulating on the Internet that why we bound feet in ancient times was to prevent women from going out to buy bags. Then you are wrong. Women's love for bags has been passed down from ancient times to the present.

Dunhuang Mogao Grottoes are the treasures of China culture, and the murals of Mogao Grottoes, like historical books, record various phenomena in the past. The murals in Mogao Grottoes are different from what we thought. They are serious and profound, recording many interesting scenes, such as The Recent Woman painted in the late Tang Dynasty:

Through this painting, we can see a maid resting under a tree with a satchel hanging on it. This satchel is not a cloth satchel that we often see in costume TV series, but a fashionable satchel that our modern women carry on the streets, and its fashion degree is no less than the current LV satchel. Are you sure it's not the Lu you crossed?

A rainstorm in Celadon Box 1984 in Yueyao rushed out of the grave of Zhu Ran, the general of Soochow in the Three Kingdoms. Experts rushed to the site to organize the excavation, and many exquisite cultural relics were unearthed, most of which were lacquerware with exquisite workmanship, but there was inevitably one? Traitor? Yue kiln celadon box:

At first glance, this square box looks like plates everywhere in the canteen. When you look closely, it looks more like a plate in the hand of an aunt in the canteen. The squares of the box are all divided according to modern plates. It won't be the plate discarded by the grave robbers after dinner, will it? After expert appraisal, it is not. That's right, which grave robber still eats the food on the plate.

The biggest difference between this unearthed celadon box of Yue kiln and the plates of modern dining hall is that people can hold six dishes except the sacred animals carved in the box, so don't worry about eating too little.

When watching Life in a Soap Box in the Ming Dynasty, Fan Xian, played by the protagonist Ruoyun Zhang, wanted to make a fortune through his own experience in modern life. As a result, his mother, who is also a traveler, was one step ahead of him and invented all the soaps and soaps he wanted to invent.

At first glance, it was a joke, until I saw the soap box of the Ming Dynasty on it, and I couldn't help wondering, was this invented by another traveler? This soap box was unearthed in Ming Dingling, and was used by the ancients to put soap. The box is divided into two parts: one is soap, the other is essential oil, and then the essential oil is used to wash your face and protect your skin. The exquisiteness of the ancients is no less than that of contemporary people.

The crystal wall crystal in the Southern Song Dynasty sounds very tall. In ancient times, it was equivalent to the status of gold, silver, jewels and jade, but in the eyes of people who don't know the goods, it was just a piece of glass.

A crystal wall unearthed from Zhao Bo's tomb in Zhejiang Province is smooth and glittering. What is even more rare is that its original braided rope was unearthed together with this crystal wall. However, unlike the cultural relics we imagined, this crystal wall of the Southern Song Dynasty looks like a plastic pendant that can be bought for ten dollars on the street at first glance, and even the weaving method of braided rope looks exactly the same. If it lives among the people, I'm afraid few people can treat it as a cultural relic and maybe give it to children to play with.

The bronze calipers in the Eastern Han Dynasty are the most like the people who came back through, and Wang Mang deserved to be the first. The bronze calipers of Wang Mang's period undoubtedly became a major material evidence that he crossed.

Bronze calipers are very similar to vernier calipers we use now. Modern vernier caliper has main ruler, auxiliary ruler, vernier frame and other parts. The only difference is that the accuracy of bronze calipers in Wang Mang's period is not as good as that of vernier calipers now.

However, it is puzzling that such modern measuring tools appeared in the Eastern Han Dynasty. Even the experts thought it was a copy made by modern times at first sight.

What about those so-called crossings? Going back to the cultural relics, it is endless for three days and three nights. After all, China has such a long history, it is inevitable that there are some magical things that are highly similar to the current items. It can only be said that the wisdom of ancient people in China is no less than that of modern people, and the objects they invented are not necessarily worse than what they have now.