Ming
Tombs
The Ming Tombs are located 50
kilmometers to the northwest of downtown
Beijing. The burial ground of 13 emperors
of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) is embraced
by mountains on three sides and opening
to a flat basin on the south. Mangshan and
Hushan mountains rise on either side. The
Wenyu River flows to the northwest. The
whole area of 40 square kilometers is covered
with ancient pine and cypress trees.
Changling, the oldest mausoleum
in the center of the burial complex on Tianshou
Mountain, was built in 1409 and Siling,
the last mausoleum of the Ming Tombs, was
built in 1644, 200 years after the first
one. It was the most costly construction
project with the longest time in the construction
of imperial burial grounds in China. In
those days the area with a circumference
of several dozen kilometers was tightly
guarded, giving it a myterious atmosphere.
In 1956 Chinese archaeologists
excavated Ding ling, the tomb of Emperor
Wen Li (Zhu Yijun) and unearthed 3,000 pieces
of gold, silver, jade and precious stone
except the confins of the emperor and his
empresses. A museum was established at the
site in October 1959. Since then the Ming
Tombs have been a favorite tourist spot.
Stele Tower
The tower of multiple eaves
with yellow glazed tiles keeps a 10-meter-high
stone tablet sitting on a stone turtle with
a dragon's head. The inscription on the
tablet reads:" Divine merrits and holy
virtues of Dingling". Four stone pillars
carved with dragons and clouds stand on
the four corners of the tower.
Divine Path
Flanking the 10-kilometerlong
path are 18 pairs of stone sculptures of
human figures and animals. The 12 standing
human figures represent cicil and military
court officials and the 24 animals are xie
(a mysterious animal in Chinese mythology),
camels, elephants, qilin (another animal
in Chinese mythology) and horses.
Changling
The oldest tomb of the 13 Ming
Tombs was built in five years for Zhu Li,
the third emperor of the Ming Dynasty. Originally
there was a wall around the mount with a
gate. The Ling'en Hall, Ming Tower, Precious
City and auxiliary establishments for sacrificial
rituals and storage have remained.
A whole view of Dingling
Dingling at the foot of Dayu
Mountain southwest of Changling is the 10th
tomb of the Ming Tombs for Zhu Yijun, the
13th emperor of the Ming Dynasty and two
empresses.
Entrance to the Underground
Palace
There are seven entrance to
the burial chamber underground. Each was
blocked by a large piece of white marble.
Those blocks of the front, middle and back
entrances are the largest: 3.3 meters wide
and weighing four tons. On the front side
of each stone slab there are 81 knobs in
nine rows. The stone door pannels are meticulously
carved and closely fitted to the entrance.
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