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    What's this?
Palace of Terracotta Army emperor unearthed
The emperor's mausoleum compound is the size of a small city, and records suggest he started building it as soon as he became emperor.

By

Stephanie Pappas, LiveScience
Thu, Dec 06 2012 at 10:18 AM

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The Terracotta Army excavation pit in 2005

The Terracotta Army excavation pit in 2005. The emperor Qin Shihuang comissioned the statues as guardians for him in the afterlife. (Photo: Wikimedia Commons)

Chinese archaeologists have unearthed the palace of China's first feudal emperor, best known for the terracotta warrior army guarding his tomb.
 
The Chinese state media reports that archaeologists have excavated the palace complex of Qin Shihuang in Xi'an, China, site of the life-size terracotta soldiers. The palace consists of 10 courtyard buildings and one main building, the paper reported. The complex runs about 2,264 feet (690 meters) long and 820 feet (250 m) wide. The total area is about a quarter of the size of Beijing's Forbidden City, built in the 1400s.
 
Qin Shihuang was born in 259 B.C. as heir to the throne of Qin, one of the six kingdoms found in what is now China. At the age of 13, Qin Shihuang took over the throne of Qin. By 221 B.C., he had conquered and unified the six warring Chinese states into one Empire, which he ruled until his death in 210 B.C.
 
Qin Shihuang's mausoleum compound is the size of a small city, and records suggest he started building it as soon as he became emperor. The newly unearthed palace complex is within the sprawling tomb. It's far from the only archaeological marvel in the mausoleum: In 1974, farmers digging a well came across a life-size terracotta soldier in the dirt — one of an estimated 8,000 that Qin Shihuang had created to guard him in the afterlife. The terracotta warriors were declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1987. Qin Shihuang also began constructing segments that would later be connected by future dynasties into the Great Wall. [In Photos: Amazing Ruins of the Ancient World]
 
Archaeologists told the Xinhua news agency that walls, sewers, doorways and rock roads were among the remains of the ancient palace. They have also found pottery and bricks. The layout of the palace matched other traditional Chinese structures, with a central axis lined up with a main building.
 
The main burial chamber of Qin Shihuang has yet to be excavated, as archaeologists worry that doing so without sufficient resources would do more harm than good. Reports written in the centuries after the emperor's death claim the burial chamber includes a map of Qin Shihuang's kingdom, including rivers of mercury. The ceiling is said to be encrusted with jewels.
 
The Qin dynasty was overthrown in 206 B.C., shortly after Qin Shihuang's death. The next dynasty, the Han, built on much of what the Qin dynasty had accomplished and lasted until A.D. 220.
 
Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas or LiveScience @livescience. We're also on Facebook & Google+.
 
Related on LiveScience and MNN:
  • Top 10 Weird Ways We Deal With the Dead
  • In Photos: A Three Kingdoms' Tomb Revealed
  • 8 Grisly Archaeological Discoveries
  • MNN: China unearths more than 100 new terracotta warriors
 
This story was originally written for LiveScience and was republished with permission here. Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company.

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