Ancient stone horses take on a new look (2004-07-23)
Two ancient stone horses in Xi'an
Beilin Museum recently reunited with parts of their bodies from which they had
been separated for 86 years.
Parts belonging to Qing Zhui and Shi Fachi, two of the six famous bas-relief
horses of the Zhaoling
Mausoleum, were found by accident during an archaeological excavation in
May. Zhao Liguang, deputy director of Xi'an Beilin Museum, said that part of
Qing Zhui's back leg was located as was a section of Shi Fachi's front hoof.
When archaeologists discovered the three pieces of sculptured stone they
immediately suspected they belonged to the four bas-relief steeds kept in Xi'an
Beilin Museum. The pieces belonging to Qing Zhui and Shi Fachi were successfully
matched .
But the third piece does not fit any of the steeds in the museum, and
archaeologists are considering that it may be part of one of two steeds
presently kept in the United States, the museum deputy director said.
These relief sculpture stone horses, known among experts worldwide as the
Zhaoling Liujun, were made in Tang
Dynasty (AD 618-907) and were placed in front of Zhaoling, the mausoleum of
Emperor Li Shimin (Tang
Taizong), the second emperor of the Tang Dynasty.
Located some 80 kilometres north of the dynasty's capital Chang'an
(present-day Xi'an) in Shaanxi
Province in Northwest China, the tomb was built in AD 636, following the
death of Empress Wende.
"When construction on the Zhaoling Tomb began, Emperor Li Shimin ordered six
steeds be sculpted, named Sa Luzi, Quan Maogua, Shi Fachi, Bai Tiwu, Te Qinpiao
and Qing Zhui, in memory of the six horses which served him in wars," Zhao said.
Emperor Li loved these steeds very much because they had been
with him fighting through numerous wars and had won decisive victories in the
establishment of the Tang Dynasty. The stone horses were carved in various
postures and look strong and vigorous.
"These stone horses, in the relief sculpture style of
Buddhist artisans, carved on six stone screens, each 2 metres wide and 1.5
metres high, with skillful technique and simple style to create liveliness, are
of great artistic value," Zhao
said.
The ancient relics drew great attention, not only from archaeologists and
artists, but also from thieves and robbers. In 1914, an American stole and
shipped two of the six stone horses, Sa Luzi and Quan Maogua, to the United
States, and the relics are now kept in the Museum of Pennsylvania University.
In 1918, the remaining four stone horses were also taken by American thieves.
However, they didn't go very far. The relics were reclaimed just as they were
about to be shipped abroad. The treasures were sent back and have been kept in
Xi'an Beilin Museum, Zhao said.
"To transport the horses more easily, the robbers broke them into pieces
first, and some pieces were apparently left on the spot," Zhao said.
In May, an archaeological team headed by Zhang Jianlin, a section director of
Shaanxi Provincial Archaeology Research Institute, found the parts of the stone
horses on a routine excavation around the Zhaoling area.
In AD 636 after Empress Wende died, Li Shimin chose Mount Jiujun as the site
to build a mountain-like mausoleum. The construction of Zhaoling Mausoleum
continued until AD 649 when Emperor Li Shimin died. The tomb was sealed after
the emperor was buried in the same tomb with his Empress Wende.
"After 13 years the tomb construction came to an end," Zhang said.
Among the 18 imperial tombs of the Tang Dynasty in central Shaanxi, where the
dynasty's capital area used to be, Zhaoling is the largest. The site reveals
that a new method had been developed to use a hill as tomb site for dead
imperial members in Tang Dynasty, Zhang said.
"Taking a hill as a tomb site means choosing a natural
peak of a mountain, chiseling a hole from the outside at the foot of the
mountain to make a tunnel leading into the underground palace where the dead
bodies are placed," Zhang said.
Zhaoling cemetery is some 60 kilometres in circumference,
covering an area of 20,000 hectares and surrounded by 167 satellite tombs.
Emperor Li Shimin's resting palace is located in the
northernmost part of the cemetery, like the imperial palace in the northern part of
Chang'an, looking down at the other tombs from the peak.
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