My system is not decent

Chapter 1771 The Zhanghe River is full of Zhangshui heads, like mountains and 72 high hills

Chapter 1771 The Zhanghe River is full of Zhangshui heads, like mountains and 72 high hills

Besides the theft, in 2009, the Nanhe Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology conducted a rescue excavation of the stolen Eastern Han tomb located in the south of Xigaoxue Village, AY City.

And what was unearthed at this time?Look at Cao Cao's thin burial.

This high mausoleum is A-shaped in plane, facing east from west. It is a double-chamber brick tomb with a sloped passage.

It is large in scale and complex in structure, mainly composed of tomb passages, front and rear chambers and four side chambers.

The decoration inside the Anyang Gaoling Mausoleum is simple and there are no murals.

Archeology found that the tomb was robbed and excavated many times, causing serious damage.

However, a number of gold, silver, bronze, iron, jade, bone, lacquer, porcelain, glazed pottery, pottery, stone and other cultural relics were unearthed.

According to statistics, about 400 relics have been unearthed that can be restored.

Is this a thin burial?Compared with an emperor, this is definitely a thin burial, and it is pitiful.

If such an ancient tomb is the real Cao Cao's tomb, what about other suspected tombs?

Relevant information about Cao Cao's suspected tomb is rare, and even the so-called Millennium Mystery Cao Cao's 72 suspected tomb has been falsified and considered to be false.

Because judging from the existing historical materials and archaeological discoveries, Cao Cao did not have a secret burial, let alone a suspicious grave.

He was just advocating simple funerals, but he did not expect that this "simplified" funeral would add a lot of complexity to history.

According to "Three Kingdoms" and other historical records, Cao Cao died in Yangluo in 220 AD.

The coffin was transported to Yecheng and buried in the hills west of Ximen Bao Temple in Yecheng.

There was no mausoleum built with soil, no burial gold and jade artifacts, and no tall and strong sacrificial halls were built.

Hundreds of years later, Cao Cao's tomb, with a simple burial, was lost in the historical relics.

After the Song Dynasty, Cao Cao was regarded as a traitor, and the unknown tomb site became a proof of his treachery.

72 Suspected tombs and other sayings are widely spread in folklore and literary works, and many people believe them to be true.

As for whether it is true or not, it is difficult to judge, but now many people agree that it is false.

Judging from the existing historical materials, Cao Cao's arrangement for his tomb has been carefully implemented.

Cao Cao's 72 suspected tombs have been passed down to the world since then.

This legend can be believed, but also because there are indeed many tombs lined up on both sides of the Zhang River like hills.

That is the so-called "Zhanghe River is full of Zhangshui heads, like mountains and 72 high hills".

The saying that there are 72 suspected tombs in Cao Cao's tomb was further strengthened after the Song Dynasty.

In the late Song Dynasty, Song and Jin confronted each other. Out of political needs, the Song Dynasty regarded itself as the Shu Han and abused the Jin Dynasty as Cao Wei who seized power and stole the country.

The Jin Dynasty simply regarded Cao Wei as orthodox, praised Cao Cao, and worshiped Cao Cao at the mausoleum every year.

But because Cao Cao's mausoleum is on the ground, it is already difficult to identify.

Therefore, the Jin people made mistakes and made the 72 tombs as Cao Cao's tombs to pay homage to them.

In the Yuan Dynasty, people both sympathized with and missed the weak and tragic Song Dynasty.

At the same time, he was extremely dissatisfied with the alien rule of the Yuan Dynasty, so he used the past to satirize the present, and even more ugly Cao Cao's image.

When Luo Guanzhong wrote "Popular Romance of the Three Kingdoms" at the end of the Yuan Dynasty, he also upheld this idea.

In the Qing Dynasty, Mao Zonggang, based on data such as Tao Zongyi's "Stop Farming Records", added in "Popular Romance of the Three Kingdoms" "And ordered to set up a suspicious tomb 72 outside Jiangwu City, Zhangde Mansion: "Don't let future generations know my burial place , I am afraid that it will be discovered by others'" sentence.

Since then, the Northern Dynasties cemetery on the bank of the Zhang River has been passed down as Cao Cao's 72 suspected tombs.

Cao Cao's tomb is not a mystery, but since the Song Dynasty, no one knows where Cao Cao's tomb is located, and there is a legend that there are 72 suspicious tombs.

Later, after the promotion of "The Romance of the Three Kingdoms", Cao Cao's tomb became an eternal mystery known to all women and children.

Cao Cao had a clear "statement" about his funeral. More than a year before his death, the "Final Order" stated that "the Ximen Leopard Temple is the Shouling Mausoleum on the west plain, and because the height is the foundation, there are no seals or trees."

Before dying, the "Last Order" made it clear that people should be buried in their usual clothes and not accompanied by jewelry.

His sons Cao Pi and Cao Zhi both described the funeral and encoffining, and confessed that they were buried in the west of Yecheng.

There are also introductions about Cao Cao's funeral in the works of Jin Dynasty literati Lu Ji and Lu Yun.

In the biographies of Sima Yi, Jia Kui and others in the history books, there are also records that they escorted Cao Cao's coffin to Yecheng for burial.

If Cao Cao sets up a suspicious grave, then he has made a lot of fakes in many historical materials left to future generations.

Not only during his lifetime, but also after the change of dynasty, there were people who contributed, and no one discovered it in the following hundreds of years, which is a bit absurd.

According to historical data, due to the simplicity of the funeral, the sacrificial hall on Cao Cao's tomb was destroyed within a few years.

There are no burial gold and jade artifacts, and they are not valued by tomb robbers.

In addition, there is no feudal earth to build mausoleums, and no trees are planted.

After several dynasties, no one knew the location of Cao Cao's tomb.

However, until the Tang Dynasty, people had no doubts about the location of Cao Cao's tomb.

Li Shimin, Emperor Taizong of the Tang Dynasty, also wrote a sacrificial oration for Cao Cao's tomb.

But since the Northern Song Dynasty, although the location of Cao Cao's tomb has been recorded in historical books, no one knows the location of Cao Cao's tomb in reality.

It was also from the Northern Song Dynasty that Cao Cao was stereotyped as a traitor, and the unknown tomb site became a proof of his treachery.

To the west of Yecheng, there are tombs of the Northern Dynasties, which are said to be the 72 suspected tombs of Cao Cao.

Luo Guanzhong stated in "The Romance of the Three Kingdoms" that Cao Cao's deceit was exaggerated by Cao Cao's treachery.

In Pu Songling's "Strange Tales from a Liaozhai Studio", there is an article "Cao Cao's Tomb" which points out that Cao Cao's tomb may be outside the 72 suspected tombs he set up, which shows his deceitfulness.

With the spread of these masterpieces, the mystery of Cao Cao's tomb has become more compelling and more confusing.

However, can these prove that Cao Cao did not set up suspicious graves?

The so-called 72 suspicious tombs are probably not real, but the tomb of Cao Cao on the surface is real?

Since Cao Cao is a traitor and everyone knows that he is treacherous, isn't he afraid of being dug out and exposed to the sun after death?

Even ordinary people are afraid of being robbed and dug their graves, let alone a generation of traitors?
You know, Cao Cao is a generation of heroes in ancient my country, even in the period of the Three Kingdoms, he is also one of the most famous figures.

He was an outstanding statesman, strategist, calligrapher and poet in the late Eastern Han Dynasty.

It has to be said that he is also a talented and capable conductor.

As for his deeds, we know that he held the emperor to make the princes, and he was under one person and above ten thousand people.

Finally, the state of Wei was established, known as the King of Wei.

He had successes and failures in his life, and the brilliance of his life eventually disappeared with the passage of time and was buried in the gears of history.

At that time, princes and nobles were all prevalent in thick burials. Could Cao Cao be an exception, certainly not an exception.

It was a time of war and many displaced farmers.

In order to raise enough military pay for Cao Cao's army, he set up an army of Lieutenant Mojin, who has professional tomb-robbing skills.

Cao Cao was afraid of being tomb-robbed after his death, so there is a legend that he built 72 suspicious tombs after his death to confuse tomb robbers all over the world.

(End of this chapter)

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