The mausoleum is 15 km long from south to
north, and 10 km wide from east to west. Except the Emperor Huizong and Emperor
Qinzong who were forayed by the Jin Dynasty (1115-1234) and died in the northern
desert, the other seven emperors of the nine emperors in the Northern Song
Dynasty were all buried here. In the first year (963) of the Qiande reign, the
grave of the father of Zhao Kuangyin, who was the first emperor of the Song
Dynasty, was moved here. There were seven emperors and eight mausoleums, which
are the Yong'an Mausoleum of Emperor Xuanzu, the Yongchang Mausoleum of Emperor
Taizu, the Yongxi Mausoleum of Emperor Taizong, the Yongding Mausoleum of
Emperor Zhenzong, the Yongzhao Mausoleum of Emperor Renzong, the Yonghou
Mausoleum of Emperor Yingzong, the Yongyu Mausoleum of Emperor Shenzong and the
Yongtai Mausoleum of Emperor Zhezong. Empresses and imperial concubines were
buried around each emperor's mausoleum, amounting to more than 20 people. There
were more than 100 people buried with the emperor, and they were maharajas and
ministers, including Kou Zhun and Bao Zheng.
In 1918, a Japanese archaeologist
investigated these mausoleums, but released a research report with many
mistakes. After the founding of the People's Republic of China, Chinese
archaeologists perambulated the Song Mausoleums many times. They generally found
out the distribution and the principle of the mausoleums. The concept and
consciousness of the Song Mausoleums are different from the mausoleums of the
Han and Tang Dynasties: the latter either occupy a commanding height or face a
water and lean against a mountain , while the former face Songshan Mountain with
the Luohe River running through the back part. The mausoleums are low-lying,
which is against the tradition of ancient architecture that the building is
heightened step by step, and the principal building is set on the supreme
position. This form of architecture has much to do with the doctrine that
decides the tomb site by geomantic omen. The organization and layout of all the
mausoleums are basically the same, each covering an area of 120 mu (15
mu = 1 hectare). The mausoleums are surrounded by walls built of rammed
earth. Divine gates are opened in the center of the four walls, and turrets are
built in the four corners. In the center of the mausoleum is the mausoleum
stage, which is built with rammed earth, and in the shape of overturned dou (a
kind of measuring instrument). On the south of the stage, two statues of palace
servants are placed. Both sides of the divine path outside of the southern
divine gate are lined with such stone statues as civilian officials, military
generals, soldiers in charge of pack animals, as well as beasts. The model of
the stone statues is simple and powerful, bold and unconstraint, reflecting the
artistic style of stone carving in the Northern Song
Dynasty.