Academics and archaeology buffs gather for the opening of the Tang Center for Early China. [Photo/CCTV.com] |
Much of East Asian culture can be traced to early Chinese civilization. Now the Tang Center, established at Columbia University in New York City, is unfolding ten millennia of China's cultural history and highlighting its importance today. It's a combination of scholarship and public outreach.
Academics and archaeology buffs gather for the opening of the Tang Center for Early China.
Its goal is to promote research and understanding of so-called "Early China", which refers to the period from 10,000 B.C. to 220 A.D., when the Han Dynasty ended.
Chinese-American philanthropist Oscar Tang, who donated five million dollars to the center, says those interested in modern China would benefit from learning about its earliest history.
"Modern China, if you will, can only be understood in any great depth if you also have an appreciation for the origins of the civilization and the ideas, institutions and so forth that were created in its early days," Tang said.
Those early days are getting a revival thanks to numerous archaeological discoveries made over the past few decades.