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‘No plan to excavate mausoleum of first emperor Qinshihuang’
XI’AN—The mausoleum of China’s
first emperor Qinshihuang, near which the world-famous terracotta army
was unearthed, would stay underground in peace in the foreseeable
future, a leading expert said.
“I would not witness the excavation in my life. In the foreseeable
future the mausoleum will maintain the status quo,” said Prof. Cao Wei,
deputy curator of the Museum of the Terracotta Warriors and Horses of
Qinshihuang. Chinese researchers in 2002 confirmed that there was a huge
underground palace in the mausoleum by using remote sensing and
geophysical exploration technologies, which Cao said did no harm to the
mausoleum.
The Shaanxi government is planning to set up a 2.9-square-km theme park
of the Qinshihuang mausoleum site and a museum of bronze chariots
unearthed near the mausoleum of Emperor Qinshihuang. The 2,200-year-old
mausoleum was discovered in Lintong county, 35 km east of Xi’an, in 1974
by peasants who were digging a well. The Chinese terracotta army buried
around the mausoleum was one of the greatest archeological finds of
modern times. More than 1,000 life-size figures were found, representing
the Emperor’s army and including officers, horses, archers, and
chariots. No two soldiers in the army are alike. Each of the
sand-colored statues has a different facial expression and hairstyle,
and craftsmen are believed to have modeled them after areal army. The
discovery of the terracotta army, listed as a world heritage site by
UNESCO since December 1987, has turned Xi’an, capital of the
northwestern Shaanxi Province, into one of the nation’s major tourist
attractions.
A museum opened in 1979 which covers the original excavation site
leaving the repaired soldiers in the place they were found. It has since
received about 60 million visitors, including at least six million from
abroad.
Emperor Qinshihuang ruled from 221 to 207 B.C. It is believed there are
a large quantity of historical cultural relics in his mausoleum. The
largest traveling exhibition of artifacts from the terracotta army — and
from the tomb of the emperor who wanted the clay warriors to help him
rule in the afterlife — left the ancient Chinese capital Xi’an for
London on Thursday. ; The 120 objects from the mausoleum of Emperor Qin
Shihuang, who ruled from 221 to 207 B.C., were being trucked to Beijing,
from where they would be flown to London, said Wu Yongqi, curator of the
Museum of the Terracotta Warriors and Horses of Qin Shihuang.—Xinhua |