Mobsea Logo
Home

Chin Shi Huangdis tomb

World Architecture

<
^
>

Chin Shi Huangdis tomb

Xian, China
In 1974, peasants digging a well in a field about 25 miles 40 kilometers east of Xian unearthed pits containing thousands of life-size, carefully detailed terra-cotta warriors, horses, and chariots. The soldiers were poised to defend the tomb of Chin Shi Huangdi 259 210 b.c.. Among the greatest archeological finds of the twentieth century, the ceramic army is but a small part of the great funerary monumenta necropolis with huge underground rooms around a gigantic burial moundthat the despotic ruler commissioned for himself many years before his death. The imperial tomb itself has not yet been uncovered. In 246 b.c., when he was thirteen years old, Ying Zheng ascended the throne of Chin, the strongest of Chinas seven surviving territories. Unifying the divided states into a single nation, in 221 b.c., he took the title Chin Shi Huangdi literallyChin, the First Emperor. Great changes ensued in his short, tyrannical reign. The feudal system was abolished, and China was divided into about forty provinces, all controlled by a centralized bureaucracy. To ensure its efficiency over such a vast area, Chin Shi Huangdi commissioned the construction of over 6,000 miles 10,000 kilometers of roads and more than 1,000 miles 1,600 kilometers of canals, which also served for irrigation and flood mitigation. Southward, his empire extended to Vietnams Red River Delta, encompassing most of what are now Yunnan, Guizhou, and Sichuan Provinces to the north, it reached as far as Lanzhou in Gansu Province and into parts of modern Korea. To defend his domain against nomad incursions, the first emperor commissioned the building of the Great Wall of China. He also initiated census taking, as well as the compulsory standardization of currency, weights and measures, writing, and even axle widths. As another means of control, in 213 b.c. he decreed that history and philosophy books, especially those contradicting Chin theories, should be burned. His despotism was resented by the common people. The foreign wars, the construction of the Wall, and other extravagant, self-indulgent public works including his tomb, supported by policies of military conscription, heavy taxation, and forced labor, had imposed a terrible financial and social cost. Toward the end of his life, fearing assassination, Chin Shi Huangdi became reclusive. He died in 210 b.c., and his empire collapsed. After eight years of widespread rebellions, Liu Pang founded the Han dynasty. The first-century-b.c. historian Sima Qian described Chin Shi Huangdis tomb as a microcosm of the universe. Ironically, the first emperors obsessive quest for an elixir of life had probably caused his madness and death he had ingested mercury as a means to immortality. Because it was intended to serve as Chin Shi Huangdis capital in the afterlife, the necropolis has many of the elements of a living city: encircling walls, parks and gardens, buildings for officials and the army, cemetery walls, and, of course, a palace. It was built mainly underground by according to historical records a labor force of 700,000 conscripts from all over China, over a period of thirty-six years. The 7,500-strong terra-cotta army stood guard in three vaults, about 0.75 mile 1.2 kilometers to the east. Their weapons were looted, possibly during the uprising after Chin Shi Huangdis death. The tomb complex proper, oriented perfectly to the cardinal points of the compass, was surrounded by a 65-foot-high 20-meter wall that enclosed the rectangular imperial tomb gardens, covering an area of about 1.3 by 0.6 miles 2.17 by 0.97 kilometers, In the center of the precinct stood the building in which funerary rituals were performed. Close to it on one side were three blocks housing the Residence of the Garden and Temple Officials on the other side were twenty-seven graves of Chin Shi Huangdis high-ranking counselors and bureaucrats, buried with him so they could continue to serve him. Nearly 100 other pits now containing the skeletons of horses and terra-cotta grooms were the emperors eternal stables. It is thought that other pits containing clay models of plants and birds were evocations of his parks and gardens The building known as the Main House, a sort of servery for Chin Shi Huangdis food, stood near the 164-foot 50-meter pyramidal grave mound, axially located at the southern end of the complex, within a second walled enclosure, measuring 749 by 632 yards 685 by 578 meters. There was a wide gate on each side. The burial chamber was lined with a waterproofing layer of bronze sheets. The tomb is believed to have been an opulent palace that accommodated all the emperors needs, based on his accustomed extravagant lifestyle. According to reports, it was rich withfine utensils, precious stones and rarities. There were scale models of palaces, towers, and official buildings, and a mechanically circulated system in which rivers of mercury represented the rivers of China and the Pacific Ocean, under a ceiling studded with pearls describing the constellations. Lamps burned whale oil to illuminate the space, and crossbow booby traps were installed to kill grave-robbers. An official account reads,Once the First Emperor was placed in the burial chamber and the treasures were sealed up, the middle and outer gates were shut to imprison all those who had worked on the tomb. No one came out. Trees and grass were then planted over the mausoleum to make if look like a hill cited in Cotterell 1981, 17. Archeological excavations continue at the site. Yuan Zhongyi, leader of the team of archeologists working on the grave site, believes that the burial ground extends over an area of about 20 square miles 50 square kilometers only a fifth of it has been uncovered. Work is funded by proceeds from the museum at the terra-cotta warriors site most of the money is used to maintain that site, but in 1997, Yuan Zhongyis annual budget was only U.S.$25,000, about a tenth of what is needed. Consequently, the dig at the tomb was temporarily suspended. The team also lacked the special conservation skills needed to handle the 2,000-year-old artifacts of silk and wood. Work resumed in 1999, and new discoveries continue.


<
^
>

Jahrhunderthalle
Pneumatic structures
Empire State Building
Mycenae Greece
Jantar Mantar
Foundling Hospital
Hydraulic boat lifts
Lalibela rock hewn churches
Temple of Amun The Hypostyle Hall
Akashi Kaikyo Bridge
Hezekiahs Tunnel
Menier chocolate mill
More ...


Test your English Language
Ways to Make This the Best Christmas Season
Narendra Modi
Marrie Curie
Tips to get ready for Long Drive
Vasant Panchami
Arvind Kejriwal
Incredible Animated Movies
World Most Beautiful Temples
Beautiful Reasons to Visit Australia
Motorcycle Racing
Tips to get ready for Job Interview
Healthy Nose
Rules to play Snow Sledding
Mahabharata Management
Tips to get ready for Group Discussion
Naturally Beautiful
Nelson Mandela
Never seen Water Like This