Decode 3,000-year-old Shang Dynasty inscriptions with AI. Point your camera at any oracle bone character and get an instant ID with full etymology.
OracleLens brings the world's oldest systematic writing system to life. Using advanced AI, it identifies Chinese oracle bone script (jiaguwen) — characters carved into turtle shells and ox bones by Shang Dynasty diviners over 3,000 years ago.
IDENTIFY ANY INSCRIPTION
Point your camera at oracle bones, museum rubbings, bronze vessel inscriptions, or stone carvings. Powered by Google Gemini, OracleLens instantly identifies the character and provides:
• Modern Chinese equivalent
• Mandarin pronunciation in pinyin
• Core meaning and cultural significance
• How this character was used in ancient divination rituals
• How it evolved into the character written today
EXPLORE THE SIGN LIST
Browse a curated encyclopedia of 53 oracle bone characters — completely offline. Each entry features:
• Authentic oracle bone script images sourced from museum archives
• Full etymology tracing each character from Shang Dynasty to modern Chinese
• Divination context: the questions inscribed, the rituals performed, the answers sought
• Did You Know facts about Shang Dynasty civilization and royal court life
BUILD YOUR DISCOVERY ARCHIVE
Every character you identify is saved to your personal collection on-device. Review your discoveries, revisit etymologies, and track your journey through ancient Chinese writing.
DESIGNED FOR EVERYONE
Whether you are a sinologist, history enthusiast, student, or museum visitor, OracleLens offers an accessible gateway to one of humanity's most fascinating writing systems. No account required. No subscription. Your scan history never leaves your device.
ABOUT ORACLE BONE SCRIPT
Oracle bone script dates to the late Shang Dynasty (c. 1250–1046 BCE). Inscribed on turtle plastrons and ox scapulae, these characters recorded royal divination ceremonies — questions asked of ancestral spirits about harvests, battles, weather, and the fate of the kingdom. Discovered in 1899 near Anyang, Henan province, they represent the earliest direct ancestor of the Chinese writing system used by over one billion people today.
PRIVACY
OracleLens collects no personal data. Your scan history is stored exclusively on your device using on-device storage. Images submitted for AI identification are processed in real time and are not retained by the service.
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