Sunday, March 16, 2008

Learn Mandarin online - Terracotta warriors bring First Emperor to London

?  ?

WORLD / Europe

Terracotta warriors bring First Emperor to London

(Reuters)
Updated: 2007-09-11 23:42

LONDON - Elements of China's Terracotta Army have arrived in England as
part of the biggest overseas loan by the museum that houses them in
western China.

?

Terracotta warrior figures are displayed as part of the exhibition 'The
First Emperor: China's Terracotta Army' at the British Museum, London
September 11, 2007. [Reuters]

Many people know of the astounding 2,000-year-old army of clay warriors
unearthed by chance just over 30 years ago by a farmer digging a well
near the town of Xi'an.

Far fewer know much about Qin Shihuangdi, a self-defined cosmic ruler who
laid the foundations of modern China in 221 BC and whose rule they were
built to perpetuate for eternity.

That may change with the "First Emperor" exhibition opening in London's
British Museum on Thursday and ending next April.

"He was an extraordinary man, a visionary," said China expert Jessica
Rawson of Merton College, Oxford. "He saw himself as a cosmic man, a
deity. He built himself into the physical landscape in life and in death."

Born in 259 BC in Qin province in the west of modern China, he became
ruler of the province at the age of 13 and just five years later set out
to subdue his warring neighbours. It took about 20 years to achieve his
goal -- and that was the easy bit.

"He created modern China that became for centuries the most powerful
nation in the world -- something that is happening once more," said
exhibition co-curator Carol Michaelson." And when China changes, the
world changes.

"Between 221 BC and his death in 210 BC he imposed the Qin penal code --
which was brutal -- created a single currency, standardized weights and
measures and imposed a single written language and bureaucracy," she
added.

Many of the bureaucratic innovations he began continued in place until
the fall of the last emperor in 1911.

"He built thousands of kilometres of roads, hundreds of palaces, the
first Great Wall and organised the building of his magnificent mausoleum
complex from where these artefacts come," she said, noting that about
700,000 people built the mausoleum and the palaces.

The tomb site statistics are as impressive as the artefacts they contain.
In total the complex covers some 56 sq km and took about 35 years to
build.

The Terracotta Army -- believed to be some 7,000 strong and all different
-- were found in three pits well away from the burial mound.

"He probably felt he would need the army for protection -- after all he
probably killed about one million people in his life," Michaelson said.

Other pits containing dancers, acrobats, musicians, bureaucrats, birds
and chariots and horses -- in short everything the emperor would need to
continue his rule -- have since been found, with more discoveries
expected.

The exhibition contains some 120 artefacts -- including several of the
larger-than-life warriors -- and explanations of their significance.

"This is not an exhibition about the Terracotta Army but about the man
who changed the world by creating China," said Neil MacGregor, director
of the British Museum.

Top World News ?

* US nuclear experts visit North Korea
* AP Poll: Most see Iraq war as failure
* Eurozone economic growth revised slightly down
* Purported new bin Laden video appears - CNN
* Abbas, Olmert agree to set up negotiation team

Today's Top News ?

* Consumer inflation jumps to 11-year high
* US nuclear experts visit North Korea
* AP Poll: Most see Iraq war as failure
* Trade surplus rebounds slightly in Aug
* Al-Qaida: 2nd bin Laden video coming

Most Commented/Read Stories in 48 Hours

Learn Chinese, Chinese Online Class, Learning Materials, Mandarin audio lessons, Chinese writing lessons, Chinese vocabulary lists, About chinese characters, News in Chinese, Go to China, Travel to China, Study in China, Teach in China, Dictionaries, Learn Chinese Painting, Your name in Chinese, Chinese calligraphy, Chinese songs, Chinese proverbs, Chinese poetry, Chinese tattoo, Beijing 2008 Olympics, Mandarin Phrasebook, Chinese editor, Pinyin editor, China Travel, Travel to Beijing, Travel to Tibet

No comments: