Overview
Yin Xu ("Ruins of Yin") lies near the modern city of Anyang in China's Henan province, on the northern bank of the Huan River. According to traditional Chinese historical sources, later substantially confirmed by archaeology, the Shang king Pan Geng moved the dynastic capital to this location around 1300 BCE, where it remained the seat of Shang royal power — known in its own time as Yin — until the dynasty's fall to the conquering Zhou around 1046 BCE.
The site's significance to world archaeology and the history of writing traces to a chance discovery in 1899. Wang Yirong, a Qing dynasty scholar and official, reportedly noticed unusual carved markings on so-called "dragon bones" — animal bones and turtle shells sold by traditional Chinese pharmacists as medicinal ingredients — and recognised the markings as an ancient form of Chinese script. This discovery launched decades of investigation that traced the bones to Anyang and identified them as oracle bones: shells and bones used by Shang diviners in a practice called pyromancy, in which heat was applied to create cracks whose patterns were interpreted as answers from ancestral spirits or deities to questions posed by the king or royal diviners, with the question and sometimes the outcome then inscribed onto the bone itself.
The roughly 150,000 oracle bone fragments recovered from Yin Xu since systematic excavation began in 1928 — led initially by the Academia Sinica's Institute of History and Philology — constitute the earliest confirmed body of Chinese writing, predating the bronze inscriptions and later classical texts long treated as China's oldest historical sources. These inscriptions record royal divinations covering warfare, harvests, weather, ancestor worship, hunting, and childbirth, providing an extraordinarily direct textual window into Shang royal concerns roughly 3,300 years ago, and have allowed historians to confirm and correct the king-lists and chronology previously known only from much later transmitted texts such as the Records of the Grand Historian.
Among Yin Xu's most celebrated discoveries is the tomb of Fu Hao, excavated in 1976 by archaeologist Zheng Zhenxiang. Remarkably, Fu Hao is independently named and described in numerous oracle bone inscriptions as a consort of King Wu Ding who led military campaigns and performed important ritual duties — meaning her tomb is one of the very few Shang royal burials whose occupant can be identified with high confidence through contemporary textual evidence rather than inference alone. Unlike most other Shang royal tombs at Yin Xu, which were looted in antiquity, Fu Hao's tomb was found essentially intact, containing over 1,600 objects including bronze ritual vessels, jade ornaments, and bone hairpins, along with sacrificial human and animal remains — offering an unparalleled combined textual and material portrait of a specific named individual from Bronze Age China.
Excavation at Yin Xu has also revealed extensive palace and temple foundation platforms, bronze-casting workshops, and a large royal cemetery containing multiple large shaft tombs, several accompanied by extensive human sacrifice — a practice well documented both archaeologically and in the oracle bone texts themselves. Yin Xu was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2006.