Problem description:
As long as it is about Gansu's characteristic culture, it can be.
Analysis:
Loulan Ancient City:
Loulan culture is the most humanistic landscape in the world. According to archaeologists, human activities in the Tarim River basin have a history of more than 10,000 years. If we use red lines to connect the abandoned ancient cities in the Taklimakan desert of Tarim River.
We will be surprised to find that all the ancient cities, including Loulan Kingdom, suddenly disappeared in the 4th and 15th centuries, and all the sites are in the desert 50-200 kilometers away from today's human life. Today, although many scholars have made great efforts, such as the rise and fall and disappearance of the ancient city of Loulan, it is still a huge mystery, and the site of Loulan has also become the focus of world attention. The ancient city of Luntai, Qiemo site, ancient tombs, ancient beacon towers, mummies and ancient rock paintings are all world-class tourist attractions.
In human history, Loulan is a mysterious name. Its glory once formed its special position in the history of world culture. People's interest and enthusiasm for Loulan culture fully shows that Loulan belongs not only to China, but also to human beings.
Loulan girl:
Who is Miss Loulan?
Loulan flourished in the ancient Han Dynasty in China and reached its peak in the Western Han Dynasty. It is the traffic fortress and the only way of the ancient Silk Road. Loulan played an important role in the struggle between the Han Dynasty and Xiongnu for the management of the Western Regions. In the Eastern Han Dynasty, Huo Guang sent troops to attack Loulan and set up a new dynasty. After 34 1 year, there was no record of Loulan in China's history books.
At the beginning of this century, Sven Hedin, a Swedish explorer, and Stein, a British explorer, came here successively, where they discovered the ruins of the ancient country of Loulan and unearthed a large number of documents and handicrafts of the Han Dynasty. Today's Loulan site preserves a 7-meter-high stupa and the "three rooms" site behind the stupa. It is said that this is the official residence of that year. Within a few square kilometers around the stupa, there are a large number of house ruins scattered. In the east of Loulan, there is a well-preserved castle-perhaps the beacon tower of the city wall or the Acropolis of Loulan.
Loulan miraculously disappeared in ancient history, fell asleep 1600 years later, and came back to life. Archaeologists have different opinions about its disappearance. However, when we walk around the Loulan site from a distance and see broken walls half buried in the sand, we may understand a lot.
Northwest drought, northwest drought, northwest heat, northwest water shortage, this is doomed from ancient times to the present, but from ancient times to the present, how many people know that behind this doomed color, how many people are destroyed by human factors. Guloulan people may migrate far away because of lack of water, which is more and more frequent in northwest China.
There is a song that sings "Miss Loulan, where are you?" The author seems to want to pursue history and find back the charm of Loulan, but who is Miss Loulan, I am, you are, he is, and she is even more. The sandstorm in Beijing this year is extremely hot everywhere, which makes us sincerely doubt whether one day people will find us in the desert and the deserted city and record us in history. There are many ways for a person to stay in history forever, which is not a glorious thing in itself.
What we are looking for today is actually not the Loulan girl herself, but the magical China border culture behind Loulan girl. The center of these cultures is the kindness and struggle between man and nature. In this desolate land of northwest China, an oasis may mean life and dignity, but when people abandon dignity and stay away from life, in the desert of history, who are we to ask "Miss Loulan, where are you?"
Today's northwest people respect, love and protect water. They named every spring they found, and every legend of them was related to spring water, just like China people worship the Yellow River today. But in the depths of these worships, there is deep destruction buried. We found mineral water bottles and paper boxes in Loulan, and maybe there are many things we can't find, which are scattered everywhere in Loulan with the wind. I don't know if they love and worship Loulan, but I think so. They only know destruction except worship. They destroy the totem they worship and look for the next one. Behind these actions, an increasingly large desert is spreading along their footprints. This is a natural desert, a cultural desert and an emotional desert. In this desert, people will never find Loulan. (Zhou Qingan)