Loulan (樓蘭; pinyin: Lóulán) is an ancient town founded in the second century BC on the north-eastern edge of the Taklamakan desert. Loulan was an ancient kingdom along China's Silk Road in Xinjiang. The ruins of Loulan are on what were the western banks of Lop Nur, in the Ruoqiang county of the Bayin'gholin Mongol Autonomous Prefecture, now completely submerged in the desert (approximate coordinates .)
A 3,800-year-old female mummy (circa 1600 BC) was discovered in Loulan in 1980 (see Mummy: Chinese mummy), suggesting an even earlier inhabitation of the region.
In 55 BC the area became a Chinese puppet state, called Shanshan. The Tarim River, which supported the settlement, subsequently changed course, and by the sixth century the city was abandoned.
Other reported (2003) finds in the area include additional mummies and burial grounds, ephedra sticks, a string bracelet that holds a hollowed jade stone, a leather pouch, a woolen loincloth, a wooden mask painted red and with large nose and teeth, boat-shaped coffins, a bow with arrows and a straw basket (Washington Times, 2005).
Cities along the Silk Road | Xinjiang | Lost cities and towns | Central Asian Buddhist sites | Ancient peoples of China | Cities along the Silk Road | Former countries in Chinese history | Oases