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Tomb of Wang Jian

The Yongling Mausoleum (Chinese: 永陵; pinyin: Yǒnglíng), commonly known as the tomb of Wang Jian (Chinese: 王建墓), is the burial place of Wang Jian (847–918), the founding emperor of Former Shu. It is located at 10 Yongling Road, Jinniu District, Chengdu, Sichuan, China.

Yongling (Tomb of Wang Jian)
The tomb chamber
Location10 Yongling Road, Chengdu, Sichuan, China
Coordinates30°40′34″N 104°02′41″E / 30.67611°N 104.04472°E / 30.67611; 104.04472
Built918
OwnerWang Jian

In the Later Tang dynasty (923–937), Emperor Meng Zhixiang issued a decree to protect the tomb. However, the auxiliary buildings of the site decayed from the Northern Song dynasty (960-1127) on. Only the grave mound and the coffin chamber survive. It was excavated between 1940 and 1943 by the archaeologist Feng Hanji and others and confirmed as Wang Jian's tomb. A number of cultural relics were found, which were transferred to Sichuan Museum. It has twice been listed as a cultural relics protection site in Sichuan Province. In 2001 a tomb passage was rebuilt in the style of other Tang dynasty imperial mausoleums.

Description edit

The Yongling Mausoleum is located at 10 Yongling Road, Jinniu District, Chengdu, Sichuan, China. To date, it is the only ancient Chinese royal tomb found with the coffin chamber above ground.[1] The grave mound is circular, and the coffin chamber is located underneath the middle of the mound. The chamber has three rooms, with a coffin in the middle room and a stone statue of Wang Jian in a sitting position in the room behind.

History edit

 
Plan of the tomb of Wang Jian

Wang Jian (847 – July 11, 918), formally Emperor Gaozu, was the founding emperor of the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period state Former Shu. He died in the first year of the Tianguang period (918 CE) at the age of 72, with a temple name of Gaozu and was buried in Chengdu.[2] In December 918 and again in March 925 (the first year of the Xiankang period), Wang Yan, Wang Jian's successor, visited the tomb to show his respect.[3]: 6079,6081  In 933 (the fourth year of the Changxing era of the Later Tang dynasty), Meng Zhixiang had the tomb renovated and formally prohibited the cutting of firewood in the nearby area.[3]: 6091  In 1014 (the 7th year of the Dazhongxiangfu era of the Northern Song dynasty), several of the mausoleum buildings were demolished, and the material used to repair a local Taoist temple named Yuejuhua.[4]: 9-10  The remaining buildings were served as a Buddhist temple named Yongning, renamed Yongqingyuan in 1103 (the second year of the Chongning period of the Northern Song Dynasty). The whole structure was later destroyed by fire,[5]: 775  with only the grave mound surviving.[6]

The location of the tomb was not recorded accurately in historical records. The most widespread description of its location was in a poem by Lu You, which described the tomb of Wang Jian along with that of his empress as being located immediately outside the "Old West Gate". The poem described the grave as having already been heavily damaged,[7] stating that only two stone columns, carved with scriptures, and several huge human and horse statues still stood.[a] Since then, records of the tomb in local chronicles followed Lu You's description.[9]: 1 

Excavation edit

In 1940, brick walls of the grave were discovered during the construction of a bomb shelter. The discovery drew the attention of Feng Hanji, an archaeology professor at Huaxi University. After an investigation, Feng identified the mound as an ancient tomb.[10] Due to conditions at the time, the exposed parts of the site had to be temporarily closed, and an excavation plan was not developed until the establishment of the Sichuan Museum in 1941. On September 15, 1942, the excavation of the tomb began, led by Feng Hanji and Liu Fuzhang. The tomb was filled with silt, and archaeologists were only able to clear a 3-meter path to the chambers. During the excavation, several items made of jade were unearthed and it was determined that the tomb was the Mausoleum of Wang Jian.

The site of the tomb is close to the location given in Lu You's poem,[9]: 1-4  but the archaeologists did not find the huge stone human statue it described.[11] The sinologist, Michael Sullivan joined the excavation; he was mistaken by a middle school student for a foreign grave robber, reported to government officials, and detained along with other archaeologists. The excavation work was interrupted by this misunderstanding. In November 1942, the excavation work was temporarily suspended. On March 1, 1943, the archaeologist Wu Jinding and Wang Zhenduo, an expert in museology, launched the second stage of the excavation. This stage focused on the southern part of the grave mound and the main chamber. The excavation discovered traces of grave robbing and unearthed a large number of cultural relics. On September 21, all excavation work was completed. The cultural relics were transferred to Sichuan Museum,[9]: 1-4  and the mound was closed again.[10] In 1971, when building a house 300 metres (980 ft) to the south of the tomb, a member of the Fuqin production brigade of Chengdu Jinniu District found a stone statue 3.18 metres (10.4 ft) high, confirming the Lu You's description.[11]

Recent developments edit

The tomb of Wang Jian has twice been listed as a cultural relics protection site in Sichuan Province: in 1956 and 1980. In 1961, it was listed as a national key cultural relics protection site. In 2001 a tomb passage was rebuilt on the south side of the Wang Jian Tomb, using materials and techniques found in other Tang dynasty imperial mausoleums; and several stone statues were added by the Yongling Museum.

In popular culture edit

The grave is widely believed to be the location of the legendary meeting between Sima Xiangru and Zhuge Liang, two famous military strategists during the Three Kingdoms period. According to the folk legend, they played the qin, a traditional Chinese musical instrument, on the grave mound during their meeting. This caused the grave mound to be named Fuqintai, meaning the place where qin are played.

Note edit

  1. ^ [8]: 186 

References edit

  1. ^ (in Chinese (China)). 成都日报. 2015-12-21. Archived from the original on 2018-03-14. Retrieved 2018-02-09.
  2. ^ 欧阳修等《新五代史·卷六十三·前蜀世家第三》:王建,字光图,许州舞阳人也。......(天复)三年八月,唐封建蜀王。......武成元年正月,祀天南郊,大赦,改元......六月,以遂王宗懿为皇太子。建加尊号英武睿圣皇帝。......光天元年六月,建卒,年七十二。......谥建曰神武圣文孝德明惠皇帝,庙号高祖,陵曰永陵。
  3. ^ a b 傅璇琮; 徐海荣; 徐吉军; et al., eds. (2004-05-01). 五代史书汇编10·蜀梼杌. 杭州: 杭州出版社. p. 6707. ISBN 7-80633-648-6.
  4. ^ (宋)黄休复 (1991). 茅亭客话. 北京: 中华书局. p. 86. ISBN 7-101-00894-1.
  5. ^ (宋)袁说友等;赵小兰整理, ed. (2011-12-01). 成都文类·下. 北京: 中华书局. pp. 449–1458. ISBN 978-7-101-07436-9.
  6. ^ "千载帝陵图册" (in Chinese (China)). 成都永陵博物馆. 2013. from the original on 2018-03-18. Retrieved 2018-02-09.
  7. ^ "永陵访古" (in Chinese (China)). 人民日报海外版. 2012-07-03. from the original on 2018-03-16. Retrieved 2018-02-09.
  8. ^ 陆游 (1998-09-01). 钱仲联 (ed.). 剑南诗稿·上. 长沙: 岳麓书社. p. 790. ISBN 7-80520-809-3.
  9. ^ a b c 冯汉骥 (2002-10-01). 前蜀王建墓发掘报告. 北京: 文物出版社. p. 93. ISBN 7-5010-1386-1.
  10. ^ a b 李志嘉 (June 1980). "王建墓". 文物: 94–97, 109.
  11. ^ a b 陈古全 (June 1981). "成都永陵出土石人". 文物: 28.

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You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Chinese June 2019 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Chinese Wikipedia article at zh 王建墓 see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated zh 王建墓 to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The Yongling Mausoleum Chinese 永陵 pinyin Yǒngling commonly known as the tomb of Wang Jian Chinese 王建墓 is the burial place of Wang Jian 847 918 the founding emperor of Former Shu It is located at 10 Yongling Road Jinniu District Chengdu Sichuan China Yongling Tomb of Wang Jian The tomb chamberLocation10 Yongling Road Chengdu Sichuan ChinaCoordinates30 40 34 N 104 02 41 E 30 67611 N 104 04472 E 30 67611 104 04472Built918OwnerWang JianIn the Later Tang dynasty 923 937 Emperor Meng Zhixiang issued a decree to protect the tomb However the auxiliary buildings of the site decayed from the Northern Song dynasty 960 1127 on Only the grave mound and the coffin chamber survive It was excavated between 1940 and 1943 by the archaeologist Feng Hanji and others and confirmed as Wang Jian s tomb A number of cultural relics were found which were transferred to Sichuan Museum It has twice been listed as a cultural relics protection site in Sichuan Province In 2001 a tomb passage was rebuilt in the style of other Tang dynasty imperial mausoleums Contents 1 Description 2 History 3 Excavation 4 Recent developments 5 In popular culture 6 Note 7 ReferencesDescription editThe Yongling Mausoleum is located at 10 Yongling Road Jinniu District Chengdu Sichuan China To date it is the only ancient Chinese royal tomb found with the coffin chamber above ground 1 The grave mound is circular and the coffin chamber is located underneath the middle of the mound The chamber has three rooms with a coffin in the middle room and a stone statue of Wang Jian in a sitting position in the room behind History edit nbsp Plan of the tomb of Wang JianWang Jian 847 July 11 918 formally Emperor Gaozu was the founding emperor of the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period state Former Shu He died in the first year of the Tianguang period 918 CE at the age of 72 with a temple name of Gaozu and was buried in Chengdu 2 In December 918 and again in March 925 the first year of the Xiankang period Wang Yan Wang Jian s successor visited the tomb to show his respect 3 6079 6081 In 933 the fourth year of the Changxing era of the Later Tang dynasty Meng Zhixiang had the tomb renovated and formally prohibited the cutting of firewood in the nearby area 3 6091 In 1014 the 7th year of the Dazhongxiangfu era of the Northern Song dynasty several of the mausoleum buildings were demolished and the material used to repair a local Taoist temple named Yuejuhua 4 9 10 The remaining buildings were served as a Buddhist temple named Yongning renamed Yongqingyuan in 1103 the second year of the Chongning period of the Northern Song Dynasty The whole structure was later destroyed by fire 5 775 with only the grave mound surviving 6 The location of the tomb was not recorded accurately in historical records The most widespread description of its location was in a poem by Lu You which described the tomb of Wang Jian along with that of his empress as being located immediately outside the Old West Gate The poem described the grave as having already been heavily damaged 7 stating that only two stone columns carved with scriptures and several huge human and horse statues still stood a Since then records of the tomb in local chronicles followed Lu You s description 9 1 Excavation editIn 1940 brick walls of the grave were discovered during the construction of a bomb shelter The discovery drew the attention of Feng Hanji an archaeology professor at Huaxi University After an investigation Feng identified the mound as an ancient tomb 10 Due to conditions at the time the exposed parts of the site had to be temporarily closed and an excavation plan was not developed until the establishment of the Sichuan Museum in 1941 On September 15 1942 the excavation of the tomb began led by Feng Hanji and Liu Fuzhang The tomb was filled with silt and archaeologists were only able to clear a 3 meter path to the chambers During the excavation several items made of jade were unearthed and it was determined that the tomb was the Mausoleum of Wang Jian The site of the tomb is close to the location given in Lu You s poem 9 1 4 but the archaeologists did not find the huge stone human statue it described 11 The sinologist Michael Sullivan joined the excavation he was mistaken by a middle school student for a foreign grave robber reported to government officials and detained along with other archaeologists The excavation work was interrupted by this misunderstanding In November 1942 the excavation work was temporarily suspended On March 1 1943 the archaeologist Wu Jinding and Wang Zhenduo an expert in museology launched the second stage of the excavation This stage focused on the southern part of the grave mound and the main chamber The excavation discovered traces of grave robbing and unearthed a large number of cultural relics On September 21 all excavation work was completed The cultural relics were transferred to Sichuan Museum 9 1 4 and the mound was closed again 10 In 1971 when building a house 300 metres 980 ft to the south of the tomb a member of the Fuqin production brigade of Chengdu Jinniu District found a stone statue 3 18 metres 10 4 ft high confirming the Lu You s description 11 Recent developments editThe tomb of Wang Jian has twice been listed as a cultural relics protection site in Sichuan Province in 1956 and 1980 In 1961 it was listed as a national key cultural relics protection site In 2001 a tomb passage was rebuilt on the south side of the Wang Jian Tomb using materials and techniques found in other Tang dynasty imperial mausoleums and several stone statues were added by the Yongling Museum In popular culture editThe grave is widely believed to be the location of the legendary meeting between Sima Xiangru and Zhuge Liang two famous military strategists during the Three Kingdoms period According to the folk legend they played the qin a traditional Chinese musical instrument on the grave mound during their meeting This caused the grave mound to be named Fuqintai meaning the place where qin are played Note edit 8 186 References edit 建在地表券拱结构 成都永陵王建墓室如此出众 in Chinese China 成都日报 2015 12 21 Archived from the original on 2018 03 14 Retrieved 2018 02 09 欧阳修等 新五代史 卷六十三 前蜀世家第三 王建 字光图 许州舞阳人也 天复 三年八月 唐封建蜀王 武成元年正月 祀天南郊 大赦 改元 六月 以遂王宗懿为皇太子 建加尊号英武睿圣皇帝 光天元年六月 建卒 年七十二 谥建曰神武圣文孝德明惠皇帝 庙号高祖 陵曰永陵 a b 傅璇琮 徐海荣 徐吉军 et al eds 2004 05 01 五代史书汇编10 蜀梼杌 杭州 杭州出版社 p 6707 ISBN 7 80633 648 6 宋 黄休复 1991 茅亭客话 北京 中华书局 p 86 ISBN 7 101 00894 1 宋 袁说友等 赵小兰整理 ed 2011 12 01 成都文类 下 北京 中华书局 pp 449 1458 ISBN 978 7 101 07436 9 千载帝陵图册 in Chinese China 成都永陵博物馆 2013 Archived from the original on 2018 03 18 Retrieved 2018 02 09 永陵访古 in Chinese China 人民日报海外版 2012 07 03 Archived from the original on 2018 03 16 Retrieved 2018 02 09 陆游 1998 09 01 钱仲联 ed 剑南诗稿 上 长沙 岳麓书社 p 790 ISBN 7 80520 809 3 a b c 冯汉骥 2002 10 01 前蜀王建墓发掘报告 北京 文物出版社 p 93 ISBN 7 5010 1386 1 a b 李志嘉 June 1980 王建墓 文物 94 97 109 a b 陈古全 June 1981 成都永陵出土石人 文物 28 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tomb of Wang Jian amp oldid 1140136675, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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