The Shanghai Museum has signed a MOU with the Central Cultural Fund (CCF) on a five-year archaeological cooperation programme. Yang Zhigang, the curator of Shanghai Museum, said the MOU was a comprehensive cultural exchange programme ranging from joint excavation, relic protection and museum exhibition to educational cooperation, Xinhua reported.
The MOU was signed after the museum's archaeological team went to Sri Lanka to join a 40-day site excavation at the ruins of Allaippidy in Jaffna in August.
The archaeologists found some porcelain fragments dating back to the Northern Song Dynasty (960-1127), which were transported from China. “Sri Lanka is an important stop on the Maritime Silk Road. Chinese explorer Zhang He visited Sri Lanka in 1405 for the first time," Yang said, explaining why the museum made Sri Lanka the first station in its overseas joint archaeological research on the Maritime Silk Road.
He said Zhang was the key figure for Shanghai Museum's overseas archaeological excavation. A stone tablet exhibited in the National Museum of Sri Lanka was proved to be left by Zhang. Archaeologists from the museum hoped to find more evidence of Zhang's fleet to Sri Lanka.
Yang said that the joint excavation in Jaffna will focus on the trade route of the Maritime Silk Road. "The two sides will hold joint exhibitions on archaeological findings and publish research papers in both Chinese and English," said the curator.
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