A wooden Bodhisattva statue was returned to China by Thai authorities in Beijing, Dec 12, 2015.
Let's take a glimpse of the major archaeological discoveries in the year of 2015.
The need for religious advice has spawned an army of self-proclaimed saints who roam for patrons and grant titles as if they were actors in a palace drama.
The Jiangxi provincial government has decided to build a large Museum of Royal Tombs of the Marquis of Haihun State of the Western Han Dynasty, with the aim of creating a world cultural park.
A team of Chinese cardio experts have offered free cardiovascular surgical operation to 10 patients at the Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital in Kumasi, Ghana's second most populous city.
Dancers from Guangzhou Ballet performed classic pieces at the Tianqiao Theater in Beijing from Dec 6 to 7.
Secret Garden sold more copies than any other book in the whole year, according to 2015 list released by Amazon China on Dec 10. The book proved to a black horse with no slowdown in sales on Amazon.cn since its publication on June 1.
Peitian ancient village, situated at the foot of Guanzhai Mountain in Liancheng county of East China's Fujian province, is well-known for its distinctive Ming and Qing architecture.
The United States returned 22 Chinese artifacts and a dinosaur fossil to China on Thursday, highlighting the two world powers' cooperation to counter illicit trafficking of archeological objects.
Chinese sculptor Tian Shixin's wood installation, Flower Bridge — Life an Exciting Play, was recently unveiled at Locomotive Square inside Beijing's 798 art zone, for a yearlong display.
Several ancient caldrons have been found in an ancient tomb, confirming the belief that it belonged to a deposed emperor from the Western Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD 24), archaeologists announced on Wednesday.
When Ge Li was 5 years old, she "made" a violin from elastic rings and a small piece of wood, after watching local musicians play at a concert.