Sites of Xianyang City and Palaces of the Qin Dynasty
The Xianyang City Site is located in the Xianyang Plain on the northern banks
of the Wei River, 15 kilometers east of Xianyang City in Shaanxi Province.
Xianyang City was the capital of the Qin State during the Warring States
period (475-221BC) and remained the capital of the Qin Dynasty (221-206BC) after
it conquered the six states. In the 350BC, King Xiaogong of the Qin State moved
the capital to Xianyang, where kings of subsequent generations erected many
palaces. During the unification of the whole country by the First Emperor of the
Qin, the architectural styles of the six states were adopted to build similar
palaces in the Xianyang Plain. The emperor also expanded his own imperial
palace, making Xianyang the most prosperous city of its time. The Xianyang City
Site was discovered between 1974 and 1975.
Near the central axis in the north of the city is a group of palace ruins
located on a high base. The ruins sit on the east and west sides of Shangyuangu
Road of the Qin period, where the one on the west is named Pit 1 and the other,
Pit 2. The construction ruins in Pit 1 are well preserved. This group of ruins
was symmetrically distributed hathpace palaces after restoration. The site is 60
meters long from east to west and 45 meters wide from south to north. The ground
floor is about 6 meters high and takes an L shape which can be divided into
several small sections.
In the west section of the south part are five rooms arranged in a line, four
of which on the west were bedrooms of imperial concubines where a number of
murals and pottery spinning wheels were unearthed. The room on the east end has
a fireplace and big pottery drainpipes inside and is presumably a bathroom. The
main palace buildings were constructed on a high base 13.4 meters long from east
to west and 12 meters wide from south to north, with the floor painted red.
To the southwest of Pit 1 is a palace built with complicated structure. The
unearthed path inside the palace is 32.4 meters long and 5 meters wide, with
colorful frescos on both sides of walls. The frescos describe the grand scene of
Emperor Qin's tour on the street with a line of vehicles driven by horses. Since
most palace frescos have been destroyed, so these well-preserved ones are of
great value and hold an important position in Chinese architectural history and
art history as well.
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