China’s Great Wall Restoration Reveals a Ming Cannon, Watchtower Life, and Hidden Artifacts
![]() Archaeologists working along the Jiankou section of the Great Wall near Beijing have uncovered a rare collection of Ming Dynasty military and daily-life remains, including a massive 17th-century cannon, heated brick beds, inscribed construction bricks, food remains, animal bones, and traces of garrison life preserved inside the wall’s watchtowers. The discoveries were announced during Beijing’s latest archaeological research briefing in December 2025, following excavations connected with conservation work at the steep and rugged Jiankou section in Huairou District. Researchers examined Watchtowers 117, 118, and 119, along with the connecting wall sections, recovering more than 300 artifacts related to weapons, architecture, and everyday life. A 1632 cannon changes the story of Jiankou Beijing Institute of Archaeology researcher Shang Heng described it as the first large firearm discovered at Jiankou. The cannon’s inscriptions, though partly corroded, remain legible enough to provide valuable evidence for the study of Ming-period firearm production, military supply systems and the exchange of artillery technology between China and the West. Researchers noted that the weapon shows features associated with the so-called Hongyi cannon, or “red-barbarian cannon,” a type of European-style artillery adopted and adapted in late Ming China. Its relatively small muzzle and larger barrel body suggest that Jiankou was not merely a symbolic defensive line, but a fortified frontier where heavy weapons were installed and maintained. Our WhatsApp channel is now LIVE! Stay up-to-date with the latest news and updates, just click here to follow us on WhatsApp and never miss a thing!! Watchtowers reveal military planning and winter survival. Watchtower 117 produced a blue-stone stele that helped date the construction of this section to 1573. That inscription provides a fixed chronological point for comparing nearby wall structures and understanding how the Jiankou defensive system developed during the Ming period. Watchtower 118 offered a different kind of evidence. Inside, archaeologists found the largest heated brick bed, or kang, yet discovered at Jiankou, along with a stove. These remains point directly to the living conditions of soldiers posted in a cold, high-altitude landscape. The Great Wall here was not only a line of defense. It was also a place where men slept, cooked, repaired equipment and endured long periods of isolation. Bricks preserve the voices of builders. |

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