They have been on guard for their emperor for 2,200 years. Terracotta Army Earth Soldiers, numbering up to 8,000. Xi’an, China. The Terracotta Army is a collection of terracotta sculptures depicting the armies of Qin Shi Huang, the first emperor of China. It is a form of funerary art buried with the emperor in 210–209 BCE with the purpose of protecting him in his afterlife.

They have been on guard for their emperor for 2,200 years. Terracotta Army Earth Soldiers, numbering up to 8,000. Xi’an, China. The Terracotta Army is a collection of terracotta sculptures depicting the armies of Qin Shi Huang, the first emperor of China. It is a form of funerary art buried with the emperor in 210–209 BCE with the purpose of protecting him in his afterlife.

Emperor Qin’s Tomb

The Terra-Cotta Army protects the tomb of China’s first emperor.

Terra-cotta warriors picture: army shown at archaeological excavation in China

Platoons of clay soldiers were buried with China’s first emperor, Qin Shi Huang Di, to accompany him during his eternal rest.

Workers digging a well outside the city of Xi’an, China, in 1974 struck upon one of the greatest archaeological discoveries in the world: a life-size clay soldier poised for battle.

The diggers notified Chinese authorities, who dispatched government archaeologists to the site.

They found not one, but thousands of clay soldiers, each with unique facial expressions and positioned according to rank. And though largely gray today, patches of paint hint at once brightly colored clothes. Further excavations have revealed swords, arrow tips, and other weapons, many in pristine condition.

The soldiers are in trenchlike, underground corridors. In some of the corridors, clay horses are aligned four abreast; behind them are wooden chariots.

The terra-cotta army, as it is known, is part of an elaborate mausoleum created to accompany the first emperor of China into the afterlife, according to archaeologists.

Young Emperor

Ying Zheng took the throne in 246 B.C. at the age of 13. By 221 B.C. he had unified a collection of warring kingdoms and took the name of Qin Shi Huang Di—the First Emperor of Qin.

During his rule, Qin standardized coins, weights, and measures; interlinked the states with canals and roads; and is credited for building the first version of the Great Wall.

According to writings of court historian Siam Qian during the following Han dynasty, Qin ordered the mausoleum’s construction shortly after taking the throne. More than 700,000 laborers worked on the project, which was halted in 209 B.C. amid uprisings a year after Qin’s death.

To date, four pits have been partially excavated. Three are filled with the terra-cotta soldiers, horse-drawn chariots, and weapons. The fourth pit is empty, a testament to the original unfinished construction.

Archaeologists estimate the pits may contain as many as 8,000 figures, but the total may never be known.

Unexcavated Tomb

Qin’s tomb itself remains unexcavated, though Siam Qian’s writings suggest even greater treasures.

“The tomb was filled with models of palaces, pavilions and offices as well as fine vessels, precious stones and rarities,” reads a translation of the text.

The account indicates the tomb contains replicas of the area’s rivers and streams made with mercury flowing to the sea through hills and mountains of bronze. Precious stones such as pearls are said to represent the sun, moon, and other stars.

Modern tests on the tomb mound have revealed unusually high concentrations of mercury, lending credence to at least some of the historical account.

Chinese archaeologists are also using remote-sensing technology to probe the tomb mound. The technique recently revealed an underground chamber with four stairlike walls. An archaeologist working on the site told the Chinese press that the chamber may have been built for the soul of the emperor.

Experimental pits dug around the tomb have revealed dancers, musicians, and acrobats full of life and caught in mid-performance, a sharp contrast to the military poses of the famous terra-cotta soldiers.

But further excavations of the tomb itself are on hold, at least for now.

“It is best to keep the ancient tomb untouched, because of the complex conditions inside,” Duan Qinbao, a researcher with the Shaanxi Provincial Archaeology Insтιтute, told the China Daily.

Related Posts

Arizona’s Ancient Forests Frozen in Time – The 225-Million-Year-Old Petrified Tree Trunks

Nature amazes us every day with enthralling color palettes it scatters around us, carelessly, but perfectly. Be it the sunset sky, the leaves in autumn, or the…

The Clacton Spear: Humanity’s Oldest Weapon and the Dawn of Thought

In a quiet display case in the Natural History Museum of London lies a relic so humble, so unᴀssuming, that many pᴀss it by without notice. A…

The Benben Stone of the Black Pyramid: The Summit of Creation and the Soul of Light

Within the hushed halls of the Egyptian Museum in Cairo rests a relic unlike any other — a dark, polished pyramidion, its surface inscribed with hieroglyphs and…

The Sacred Birth: How the Ancient Egyptians Understood the Miracle of Life

On the sun-warmed walls of ancient temples, amid lines of hieroglyphs carved three thousand years ago, the story of life unfolds — not as myth, but as…

The Mystery of the One Sandal: The Hidden Symbolism of Tutankhamun’s Step Into Eternity

In the golden tomb of Tutankhamun, discovered in 1922 beneath the sands of the Valley of the Kings, every object seemed touched by divinity — each fragment…

The Hidden Genome: The Discovery of Non-Human DNA in a Siberian Cave

In the frozen heart of Siberia, where the earth sleeps beneath layers of ice and time itself feels arrested, scientists have uncovered something that defies the boundaries…