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The
Terra Cotta Warrior Army is an extraordinary experience that
you must see at least once in your life time, and will be
one of the most memorable events in your China Dream Tour!
This magnificent achievement was created more than 2000 years
ago. Workers labored for 37 years and still it was never fully
completed! The Terra Cotta Army is an underground army of
8,000 life-sized clay warriors; each individual soldier with
a vivid and unique face, extraordinarily lifelike in appearance.
Each warrior has his own unique features, pose, hair-style
and facial expression. You will never find two warriors that
look the same. All of them look so vivid and well prepared
for battle! These soldiers are true representations the Chinese
people of that period.
One of the most legendary people
in Chinese history is the one who started the Chinese feudal
society, Emperor Qin Shihuang. He was the first one who had
the courage, vision and iron will to unify the disparate individual
kingdoms into one country called China! As the first emperor
of China, whatever right or wrong, he changed history forever.
Emperor Qin Shihuang was the first to unite China, and while
his reign was temporal, the unity and feudal society he created
would last for over 2200 years, through a succession of dynasties
until the early twentieth century. Most people know that the
Great Wall is one of the seven ancient wonders of the world.
But most people may not know that Emperor Qin Shihuang is
the one who conceived and created that wonder!
Emperor
Qin Shihuang was born in 259 B.C. and became king of the state
of Qin at the age of 13. One by one, he conquered the other
six kingdoms and unified China into one country. In 221 B.C.
he established the Qin Dynasty, the first centralized and
unified regime in Chinese history. Although reviled for his
tyranny, Qin Shihuang is also admired for many radical and
insightful policies which subsequent dynasties employed long
after his time. To synthesize seven separate kingdoms into
one nation, he standardized a common script and established
uniform measurement and monetary systems. For effective government,
he codified a legal system and replaced hereditary rulers
with a centrally appointed administrative system. To improve
industrial productivity he encouraged agricultural reforms
and constructed many roads. And in an effort to limit the
encroachment of barbarian tribes, he supervised the construction
of a defensive fortification along the northern frontier,
the first Great Wall. Although China benefited from these
policies, thousands of Chinese workers died in completing
this far-reaching public works program. Even though the Qin
dynasty only lasted 15 years, he totally changed and created
the history of China! Although there were many more dynasties
in the 2,000 years after him, they all inherited and embraced
the entire system that he created.
Whatever
his achievements however, Qin Shihuang was truly a despot
- conceited, cruel, unforgiving, and mercurial of temperament.
He ruthlessly executed anyone he thought was against him.
Even his grand projects, such as his tomb, the Terra Cotta
Warrior Army, and the Great Wall were built on the suffering
of the people. 700,000 forced laborers were conscripted to
construct his tomb, which began as soon as he ascended the
throne at age 13. All the workers and childless concubines
were interred with him to safeguard its secrets. His tomb
took 37 years to build and is protected by the 8,000 life-sized
Warriors of the Terra Cotta Army. The army lies in three separate
pits, nearly one kilometer east of Qin Shihuangs tomb
known as Mount Li. They guard him in death as his army did
in real life. The warriors are still in their battle formation,
facing east against the six conquered kingdoms; eternally
vigilant and awaiting the command of their emperor. Can you
imagine that, this miracle of an archeology discovery was
found by a farmer when he was digging a water well in 1974?
That is why there is a popular saying in China: that if you
want to be millionaire over night, dig a hole in Xian!
Because Xian was the capital of 13 dynasties, spanning
more than 2,000 years, and there are 73 emperors buried there.
And most of the tombs have not been opened yet due to the
lack of technology that can guarantee their protection from
the elements.
According
to the history books, Qin Shihuangs tomb was built below
the water table, reinforced with bronze as waterproofing.
The size of his tomb is gigantic and follows the layout of
his capital during his regime, Xianyang, near the present
day city of Xian. The entire mausoleum covers more than
60 square kilometers, and is larger than the present day city
of Xian! It is a miniature of Qin Shihuangs world
when he lived. There are gemstones used as stars, in perfect
celestial formations. Flowing rivers of mercury depict the
Yangtze and Yellow Rivers. There are even mountains and canyons,
everything in their accurate geographic location! And all
manner of treasure is protected by deadly booby-traps. Imagine
the excitement when his tomb is finally opened to the world!
The main tomb has yet to be excavated - partly because archaeologists
are still uncertain of its exact location. Often Emperors
constructed huge burial mounds simply to divert robbers' attention
from the true site of their tomb. So the
artificial mound that today marks the Emperor's tomb does
not necessarily indicate the location of its wondrous central
chamber. However, because high mercury levels have recently
been reported nearby, archaeologists think they may have at
last discovered it. The Terra Cotta warriors that you will
see when you visit Xian form just one of the many barriers
the ruthless Emperor employed to protect his tomb for eternity!
The Terra Cotta Warrior excavation
is actually still an on-going archeology site, and everyday
we learn a little bit more about extraordinary people of that
time, and the miracle that they created!
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