As early as 1984, when the tile palace in Renzutun, Jixian County, Shanxi Province was destroyed, archaeologists found the remains under the statue of Nuwa, wrapped in yellow silk and filled with wooden letters. ? Muxin? The ink says:? In the fifteenth year of Zhengde in Daming (1520), Jinshan Temple was burned by skyfire, and the remains of the emperor flowed here. In sixteen years, the beam was erected. ? The emperor's bones flow first? . The ink book of the Ming Dynasty records this human bone? The remains of the emperor? , which is what we call the remains of the emperor Nuwa.
20 1 1 year, archaeologists conducted an investigation in Jixian county, Shanxi province. Rescue? After sorting out, we found 29 1 piece (set) of relics from the Warring States, Han and Tang Dynasties, Song and Yuan Dynasties, Ming and Qing Dynasties and the Republic of China, and found human skulls, wooden letter fragments, animal bones and so on sacrificed 2/kloc-0-00-900 years ago in the Wagong accumulated soil. This is the earliest archaeological remains found in China.
Subsequently, Peking University's C 14 isotope dating concluded that the adult skull was 6200 years ago, and the calligraphy inscription 20 1 1 was found under the statue of Tiannuwa Palace in Renzutun, Jixian County, Shanxi Province. The remains of the emperor? , may belong to the legendary prehistoric? Three emperors era? what's up The emperor? Bones. ?
When this news came out, it shocked the archaeological community and caused experts to explode the pot and express their opinions in succession. Experts believe that in the long matriarchal society, Nu Wa was originally the name of the primitive clan and also the name of the clan leader, not just a Nu Wa, but a generation after generation of Nu Wa. In the inscription of Muxin? The emperor? In short, it may be a certain generation of Nu Wa, or it may be the last generation, which is Nu Wa's pursuit of the lofty status of matriarchal social leaders. So this relic is undoubtedly believed by Ming people? The emperor? Bones. ?
Regarding the snake-shaped image of Nu Wa, the answer given by experts is that Nu Wa is a human being and cannot be snake-shaped. This snake-like image is only the worship and imagination of totem by later generations. According to the information provided by archaeological sites, relics and painted pottery patterns, prehistoric people's struggle against floods and their reproductive worship are rooted in the inheritance of female worship in primitive matriarchal society. Snakes not only have strong vitality, but also have strong reproductive ability, which stems from prehistoric human worship of reproduction. So the descendants of Nu Wa were shaped into the shape of a snake.
I never thought that the remains of Nu Wa found in Shanxi might really be true. I really didn't expect that not all the characters in the original myth are deceptive. The snake-shaped offspring of Nu Wa also comes from the imaginary image of the ancient people worshiping totems.