Shajing culture

Shajing culture
Map of the Shajing culture (). The City of Xiutu () was about 20km north of Wuwei, and about 500km from Guyuan and its Great Wall built by King Zhao of Qin in 271 BCE (), and by Qin Shihuang (circa 210 BCE, )
Geographical rangeGansu
Dates800/700–100 BCE.
Type siteShajing 沙井村 (Minqin County) 39°05′43″N 100°16′00″E / 39.095264°N 100.266670°E / 39.095264; 100.266670
Major sitesLiuhudong (Minqin County)

Hamadun (Yongchang County)
Yushugou (Yongdeng County)
Sanjiaocheng 三角城 (Jinchang) Liangucheng 连古城
Yangchaodun 柳湖墩

Jinshangsanjiaocheng 金昌三角城
Preceded byMachang culture (2200-2000 BCE)

Xichengyi culture (2000-1600 BCE)
Siba culture (1700-1300 BCE)
Siwa culture (1350-650 BCE)

Shanma culture (900-100 BCE)
Followed byXiongnu (King Xiutu, 150-121 BCE)

Western Han dynasty (121 BCE-)

Majiayuan culture (3rd-2nd c. BCE)

The Shajing culture (Ch: 沙井文化, 800/700–100 BCE), is an ancient Iron Age culture in the area of Gansu, to the northwest of the Central Plains of China. The village of Shajing is about 250 km northwest of Wuwei, while the village of Yushugou, another important Shajing site, is about 140 km to its southeast. The Shajing culture is closely associated to the Saka culture of the Xinjiang, the Ordos culture of Inner Mongolia and the Upper Xiajiadian culture of Liaoning. It was a culture essentially based on pastoral nomadism. As of 2017, seven sites had been excavated and almost as many fortified settlements built with walls of compacted loess.