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List of Ruins in China

China’s countryside and cities hold layers of history visible in weathered walls, ruined fortifications and long-abandoned settlements; each site tells a story of trade, warfare, religion or daily life across millennia. Walking these places helps connect archaeological evidence with the people who lived there, from Neolithic villages to Silk Road outposts.

There are 20 Ruins in China, ranging from Banpo to Yumen Pass (Jade Gate). For each entry you’ll find below the Location,Era (dynasty or approximate year),Significance (max 15 words) organized concisely so you can scan dates, places and importance quickly — you’ll find below.

Are these sites generally open to visitors and do I need permits?

Many ruins are publicly accessible, though access varies: some are on protected archaeological parks with visitor facilities, others are remote or on restricted land; check local management, opening hours and any permit requirements before you go.

How reliable are the era labels and brief significance notes?

Dates and dynasty attributions are based on current scholarship and site reports but can be approximate; the “Era (dynasty or approximate year)” field flags uncertainty, so consult detailed sources or museum information for in-depth research.

Ruins in China

Name Location Era (dynasty or approximate year) Significance (max 15 words)
Yinxu Henan, Anyang Shang, 1,300–1,046 BCE Shang capital; oracle bones discovery
Erlitou Henan, Yanshi (near Luoyang) Erlitou culture, 1,900–1,500 BCE Early urban palaces; proto‑Shang/Xia evidence
Sanxingdui Sichuan, Guanghan City Shu Bronze Age, c. 1,200–1,000 BCE Unique Bronze Age cult site; enigmatic artifacts
Banpo Shaanxi, Xi’an Yangshao Neolithic, 5,000–3,800 BCE Well-preserved Neolithic village and pottery tradition
Daming Palace Shaanxi, Xi’an Tang, 7th–10th century Tang imperial palace foundations; large archaeological park
Jiankou Great Wall Beijing, Huairou District Ming, 14th–17th century Unrestored, dramatic Ming Great Wall; popular for hikers
Gubeikou Great Wall Beijing/ Hebei border, Miyun/Huairou Ming, 14th–17th century Strategic Ming pass with unrestored fortifications
Jiaohe Xinjiang, Jiaohe (near Turpan) Han–Tang, 2nd century BCE–14th century CE Earthen Silk Road city carved on plateau; accessible ruins
Gaochang Xinjiang, Turpan 1st–14th century CE Silk Road oasis city ruins with multi‑period layers
Niya Xinjiang, Minfeng County 2nd–4th century CE Silk Road township with wooden remains and documents
Loulan Xinjiang, Lop Nur rim (Ruoqiang County) 2nd century BCE–4th century CE Deserted Silk Road kingdom ruins; evocative desert site
Khara‑Khoto Inner Mongolia, Ejin Banner Western Xia, 11th–14th century Western Xia desert city; ruined temples and walls
Shangjing (Liao Upper Capital) Inner Mongolia, near Ningcheng County Liao, 10th–12th century Khitan Liao dynasty capital archaeological ruins
Shimao Shaanxi, Shenmu County Late Neolithic, c. 2,300–1,700 BCE Large Late Neolithic walled city with stone fortifications
Taosi Shanxi, Xiangfen County Longshan, c. 2,300–1,900 BCE Longshan fortified town; possible early observatory and elite burials
Liangzhu Zhejiang, Yuhang District (Hangzhou) Neolithic, 3,300–2,300 BCE Neolithic ceremonial center; jade culture and waterworks
Shicheng (Lion City) Zhejiang, Chun’an County (Qiandao Lake) Ming–Qing, 14th–20th century Submerged Ming–Qing city preserved underwater since reservoir flooding
Yumen Pass (Jade Gate) Gansu, Dunhuang Han, 2nd century BCE onward Han dynasty frontier pass ruins on the Silk Road
Western Xia Imperial Mausoleums Ningxia, near Yinchuan (Lingwu area) Western Xia, 11th–13th century Ruined Western Xia imperial tomb complex; Tangut funerary remains
Yuanmingyuan (Old Summer Palace) Beijing, Haidian District Qing, 18th–19th century Ruined Qing imperial gardens destroyed in 1860; evocative site

Images and Descriptions

Yinxu

Yinxu

Yinxu is the ruined late Shang capital near Anyang, Henan, famous for oracle bones and palace foundations. Visitors see excavated foundations, tombs, bronze artifacts and a small museum; important for early Chinese writing, archaeology and Shang dynasty urban layouts.

Erlitou

Erlitou

Erlitou site near Yanshi, Henan, shows early palace compounds and urban planning from the Bronze Age. Excavations revealed large courtyard buildings, bronze workshops and pottery; key candidate for early state formation often linked to early Shang or Xia traditions.

Sanxingdui

Sanxingdui

Sanxingdui ruins near Guanghan, Sichuan, preserve monumental Bronze Age ritual pits and platforms from a mysterious Shu culture. Spectacular masks, bronzes and stacked sacrificial deposits make the open excavations uniquely dramatic for archaeology and museum displays.

Banpo

Banpo

Banpo Neolithic village in Xi’an, Shaanxi, is a dug‑pit settlement showing house foundations, pottery kilns and burial pits. Open‑air remains and museum displays explain Yangshao farming life, communal structures and early village organization for curious visitors.

Daming Palace

Daming Palace

Daming Palace ruins in Xi’an, Shaanxi, mark the Tang dynasty imperial complex. Visitors can walk vast foundation platforms, reconstructed gate outlines and museum exhibits that trace Tang court life, administrative layout and grand ceremonial architecture.

Jiankou Great Wall

Jiankou Great Wall

Jiankou is a wild, precipitous Great Wall section in Huairou, Beijing, showcasing collapsed towers, crumbling crenellations and raw Ming‑era masonry. Popular with adventurous hikers, it offers dramatic ruined scenery but requires care and local guiding for safety.

Gubeikou Great Wall

Gubeikou Great Wall

Gubeikou, on the Beijing–Hebei boundary, preserves unrestored Ming fortifications and ruined passes. Battlements, beacon towers and ruined gates convey frontier military history; less crowded access gives an authentic Great Wall ruin experience for visitors.

Jiaohe

Jiaohe

Jiaohe Ancient City near Turpan, Xinjiang, is an earthen fortress carved from a single plateau. Its street grid, watchtowers and collapsed house ruins span Han through Tang periods, offering dramatic Silk Road desert archaeology and accessible ruins to explore.

Gaochang

Gaochang

Gaochang ruins near Turpan, Xinjiang, are the remains of a multi‑period oasis city used by Han, Tang and Uyghur states. Stone and adobe walls, temple foundations and tombs trace Silk Road trade and religious interchange.

Niya

Niya

Niya ruins in Minfeng County, Xinjiang, preserve a small Silk Road township with wooden architecture remains, streets and documents from the 2nd–4th centuries CE. Remote desert excavations reveal daily life, irrigation and caravan connections.

Loulan

Loulan

Loulan ruins on the Lop Nur rim (Ruoqiang County, Xinjiang) mark a once‑flourishing Silk Road kingdom abandoned to desertification. Scattered walls and salinized soil make for evocative, fragile ruins accessible with guides and a 4×4 adventure.

Khara‑Khoto

Khara‑Khoto

Khara‑Khoto (Heicheng) ruins in Ejin Banner, Inner Mongolia, are the desert remains of a Tangut Western Xia city. Collapsed walls, ruined Buddhist temples and dune‑encroached streets testify to stepped abandonment and archaeological interest.

Shangjing (Liao Upper Capital)

Shangjing (Liao Upper Capital)

Shangjing (Liao Upper Capital) ruins near Ningcheng County, Inner Mongolia, preserve layout and foundations of the Khitan Liao dynasty capital. Excavated towers, palaces and defensive works illuminate nomadic‑state urbanism from the 10th–12th centuries.

Shimao

Shimao

Shimao site near Shenmu, Shaanxi, is a Late Neolithic walled city with massive stone ramparts and tower bases. Excavations reveal elite architecture, jade and ceramics; the scale rethinks early urbanism on the Loess Plateau.

Taosi

Taosi

Taosi ruins in Xiangfen County, Shanxi, are a Late Longshan fortified settlement with possible astronomical observatory remains and elite burials. Visitors see earthen walls, platforms and excavated residential layouts illuminating Bronze‑Age social complexity.

Liangzhu

Liangzhu

Liangzhu archaeological site in Yuhang, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, preserves Neolithic city remains famed for sophisticated jade artifacts, water management and ceremonial platforms. Low mounds and excavation areas reveal the complex ritual and social life of 3,300–2,300 BCE communities.

Shicheng (Lion City)

Shicheng (Lion City)

Shicheng, the ‘Lion City’ submerged beneath Qiandao Lake in Chun’an County, Zhejiang, is a Ming–Qing town preserved underwater since 1959. When accessible, divers and occasional low‑water sightings reveal intact streets, gates and carved stonework beneath the surface.

Yumen Pass (Jade Gate)

Yumen Pass (Jade Gate)

Yumen Pass (Jade Gate) ruins near Dunhuang, Gansu, mark a Han dynasty frontier pass on the Silk Road. Remains include watch towers, low earthen walls and sparse ruins set in arid landscape rich in history.

Western Xia Imperial Mausoleums

Western Xia Imperial Mausoleums

The Western Xia mausoleums near Yinchuan, Ningxia, are a cluster of ruined imperial tombs, brick towers and collapsed stelae set in the desert. They provide rare material evidence for Tangut empire funerary architecture and archaeology.

Yuanmingyuan (Old Summer Palace)

Yuanmingyuan (Old Summer Palace)

Yuanmingyuan ruins in Haidian, Beijing, preserve scorched foundations, ruined halls and carved stones from the Qing imperial gardens destroyed in 1860. The site is evocative for visitors interested in imperial architecture, colonial history and ruin landscapes.

Ruins in Other Countries