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The First Emperor-Qin Shihuang
In
221 B.C., after eliminating the six rival states, King Ying
Zheng of Qin established, for the first time in Chinese history,
a unified, multi-national state under a centralized leadership.
During his reign, the emperor issued decrees for the standardization
of law, of currency, of the script and of weights and measures.
Believing that he had achieved even greater feats than the
legendary emperors and kings, Ying Zheng decreed that the
use of the royal title of "king" should be discontinued
and proclaimed himself "the First Emperor" in the
hope that his reign would be succeeded by the Second Emperor
and then the Third and so on into infinity.
In
order to consolidate his regime, the First Emperor has all
the bronze weapons in the hands of the people confiscated.
He then had them melted and made into twelve gigantic bronze
figures. He also ordered the burning of all the books by influential
scholars and philosophers of various schools of thought. Worse
still, he even had several hundred Confucian scholars buried
alive. However, the First Emperor was an extremely superstitious
man and hoped that in death he could still enjoy all the luxuries
and pleasures he had when alive. So, for 36 out of the 37
years of his reign, he had more than 700,000 laborers pressed
into service to build his own mausoleum, a paradise of an
abode for an eternal existence.
According
to historical record, molten copper was poured onto the bottom
of the burial pit to stave off wetness, and on this metal
base the emperor's coffin was lay. The mausoleum was composed
of many beautiful halls and chambers in which were stored
all kinds of valuable jewelry. It was filled with mercury
too, to form make-believe lakes and seas. On the ceiling were
hung what were called "moon bright pearls", to stand
for the sun, the moon and the stars.
The research
and excavation is still going on at the site of the First
Emperor of Qin's mausoleum.
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