Mausoleums of Emporers of the Western Han
Dynasty (206BC-8AD)
Location: Around Xi'an, Shaanxi Province
Period: 195 BC -3 AD
Excavated from 1970 to the present
 |
| Bronze incense burner gilded with gold and silver and in
the shape of bamboo stick: utensil for burning incense (left, height 58
cm); Jade sculpture of an immortal on galloping horse: decorative object
(right-bottom, length 8.9 cm, height 7 cm) |
Significance: It has laid a solid foundation
for the study of mausoleum systems for emperors of the Han Dynasty.
Introduction
Like the famous Qinshihuang Mausoleum, the
Mausoleums and Royal Graveyards of Western Han (or the Western Han Imperial
Tombs) are also in Xi'an,
Shaanxi Province. The shape and structure are about
the same as the Qinshihuang Mausoleum, both being in a sharp point and a flat
top, with a square cone-shaped earth mound. There is also a royal hall on the
flat top, but the earth mound is much smaller than that of the Shihuang
Mausoleum. The mausoleum walls on four sides are mostly of only one layer, with
doors opening to four sides.
The mausoleums are the place where 9 of the
11 Western Han emperors were buried. In the graveyards, there are also resting
halls and temples. Excavation of the underground hall of these mausoleums is
still under discussion.