When the pits were opened, all the soldiers had been smashed by a subsequent emperor. All the soldiers that we saw have been pieced together. In one area, partially reconstructed soldiers stand, waiting to be placed back in their ranks. In other areas, the broken soldiers wait their turn.
Within a year of the uncovering, all the paint had eroded away. Despite official denials, scientists say that the human presence (carbon dioxide), mold, and air pollution are also causing the actual statues to decay quickly. In one of the pits they have excavated, but left the clay/dirt "ceiling" on so you can't see the soldiers in an attempt to protect them until they can figure out how to preserve them.
The size of the site is Egyptian in its scope. It was truly awe-inspiring. The emperor was 13 when construction started and an estimated 700,000 workers labored on the project. Nearby is a very large flat-topped mountain--the emperor's tomb. Our guide told us that all the feng shui and information makes them believe that it would be very bad luck to open it, so it has remained unexcavated. I don't buy that for a minute.
3 comments:
so what do YOU think the real reason is that they haven't opened up the grave? Bad feng shui makes perfect sense to me.
Nice pictures! I was there in 1996 and we were not allowed to take photos :-( It looks as though they have excavated a lot more in the last 13 years! If they've got any sense, the reason they haven't excavated the tomb is because they still haven't figured out how to properly preserve the stuff they've got so far!
Karen, I suspect that they already know what's in there...and it's nothing. Either they have some way of using sonar imaging to scan to see what might be there...or it's been opened, found to be lacking in wonders, and then everyone is told the "bad juju" line.
Honestly, is there really any place that would NOT be opened if anyone thought there were treasures there? It certainly didn't spot the Brits in Egypt. In fact, if the Chinese are really worried, they could subcontract that opening out to some group that's willing to risk the Curse of the Dragon King or whatever danger awaits.
Post a Comment