Skip to main content
Terracotta Army
🌍 UNESCO

Terracotta Army

秦始皇兵马俑

📅~246-210 BC
Qin Dynasty (3rd century BC)
📖3 Hikâye
🌍UNESCO
Taçlar ve Fetihler (1)Geçmişin Bilmeceleri (1)Düzenbazlar ve Halk Masalları (1)

About

s First Emperor, Qin Shi Huang. Discovered accidentally in 1974 by farmers digging a well near Xi'an, the warriors were arranged in battle formation in three vast underground pits. Each figure is unique — individually sculpted faces, hairstyles, expressions, and body types representing every rank from generals to foot soldiers, archers to cavalrymen. No two are alike among the thousands. The warriors are merely the outer guard of something far more ambitious: the tomb of Qin Shi Huang himself. According to the historian Sima Qian, writing just a century after the emperor's death, the tomb contains a miniature replica of the entire empire, with rivers and seas of flowing mercury, a ceiling painted with celestial constellations, and crossbow traps designed to kill anyone who entered. Modern scientific surveys have confirmed extraordinarily high mercury levels in the soil above the central tomb mound — lending chilling credibility to the 2,100-year-old account. The tomb itself has never been opened. The Chinese government has stated it will not excavate until technology exists to perfectly preserve what lies within. What Qin Shi Huang built as his afterlife palace remains sealed, waiting in the darkness beneath a 76-meter-high earthen mound, exactly as it has been since 210 BC. UNESCO inscribed the site in 1987. It is considered one of the most significant archaeological discoveries in world history.

Historical Significance

The Terracotta Army reveals the staggering ambition and absolute power of China's First Emperor. Qin Shi Huang unified China in 221 BC, creating the first centralized Chinese empire. He standardized weights, measures, currency, and writing. He built the first Great Wall. And he began constructing his tomb complex — the largest and most elaborate burial in human history — almost immediately upon taking the throne at age 13. The scale is almost incomprehensible. The tomb complex covers 56 square kilometers — larger than the city of Manhattan. The underground army alone fills three pits totaling 20,000 square meters. Each warrior took artisans an estimated 3-4 months to complete. The weapons they carried were real — bronze swords, crossbow triggers, and spearheads, many still sharp after 2,200 years thanks to a chromium oxide coating that anticipated modern anti-rust technology by two millennia. The army represents the emperor's belief in the afterlife as a continuation of earthly existence. Just as he ruled the living world, he intended to rule the dead one — with a full military force at his command. But the tomb also represents something darker: the ultimate expression of tyrannical power. Sima Qian records that after the emperor's burial, the inner doors of the tomb were sealed with the craftsmen still inside, to prevent them from revealing its secrets. The outer doors were then sealed with the soldiers who had carried the emperor's body. An unknown number of people were buried alive with their creation.

Hikâyeler

3
⚗️

황제는 죽기 싫었다

246-210 BC — Qin Dynasty

기원전 221년, 한 남자가 아무도 못 한 일을 해냈다——여섯 나라를 하나로 만들었다. 하지만 그것만으로는 안 됐다. 그에게는 이길 수 없는 적이 하나 있었다. 죽음이다.

1 minS
Qin Shi Huang — First Emperor of ChinaXu Fu — the alchemist who sailed eastLi Si — the chief minister who concealed the death+1
Hikâyeyi Oku
🌊

수은이 흐르는 무덤

210 BC — Qin Dynasty

기원전 100년쯤, 사마천이라는 역사가가 말도 안 되는 기록을 남겼다. 중국 최초의 황제 진시황의 무덤 안에 진짜 수은으로 만든 강이 흐르고 있다는 것이다. 비유가 아니다. 실제 수은을 기계로 돌려서 중국의 강줄기를 그대로 재현했다는 얘기다.

1 minA
진시황 — 지하 세계를 만든 황제사마천 — 이 모든 것을 기록한 역사가현대 과학자들 — 수은의 존재를 확인한 사람들
Hikâyeyi Oku
🕳️

우물 파다 제국을 캐낸 농부

1974년——현대의 발견

1974년 3월, 중국 시안 외곽의 먼지투성이 마을에서 양즈파라는 농부가 이웃 두 명과 함께 우물을 파기 시작했다. 극심한 가뭄에 농작물이 죽어가고 있었고, 필요한 건 오직 물뿐이었다. 그게 전부였다.

1 minA
양즈파——역사를 바꾼 농부양취안이, 양페이옌——함께 우물을 판 마을 주민위안중이——발굴을 이끈 고고학자
Hikâyeyi Oku

History

👑 Built by

Qin Shi Huang (First Emperor of China); 700,000 conscripted laborers

246 BC - Ying Zheng becomes King of Qin at age 13; construction of his tomb begins immediately

221 BC - Ying Zheng conquers all rival states and declares himself Qin Shi Huang (First Emperor)

~220-210 BC - Terracotta Army and tomb complex constructed; up to 700,000 workers conscripted

210 BC - Qin Shi Huang dies during a journey seeking the elixir of immortality; buried in the tomb

207 BC - General Xiang Yu raids and burns parts of the terracotta army pits after Qin Dynasty falls

206 BC - Han Dynasty established; the tomb complex is largely abandoned and forgotten

1974 - Farmers Yang Zhifa, Yang Quanyi, and Yang Peiyan discover the first terracotta fragments while digging a well

1976 - Pits 2 and 3 discovered; systematic excavation begins under archaeologist Yuan Zhongyi

1979 - Pit 1 opened to the public

1987 - Inscribed as UNESCO World Heritage Site

1999 - Colored pigments discovered on warriors — they were originally painted in vivid colors

2003 - Mercury surveys confirm Sima Qian's account of mercury rivers inside the main tomb

2009 - Pit 2 excavation resumes; new warriors with painted faces discovered

Tags

#terracotta army#unesco#xian#qin dynasty#archaeology#other#ancient#must-see#world wonder#history