The Maoling Mausoleum is located in
Maoling Village of Nanwei Town on the Weibei altiplano, about 40km north of
Xi'an City in Shaanxi Province.
The Maoling Mausoleum was the tomb of
Emperor Wudi in the Western Han Dynasty (206BC-8AD). It is grand in scale, and
it is the biggest mausoleum among the imperial mausoleums of the Western Han
Dynasty.
Emperor Wudi (156-87BC) of the Han Dynasty,
named Liu Che, was the son of Emperor Jingdi. During the 54 years of his reign,
he greatly expanded the territory. As an emperor with great achievements in
Chinese history, he governed the nation smoothly and reinforced his power. In
the second year of his reign, Emperor Wudi began to build the Maoling Mausoleum,
which took 53 years to fnish.
The mausoleum is square and consists of the
inner and outer city, with bounding wall around it. The rampart is 431m long
from the east to the west, and 415m from the south to the north. The wall base
is 5.8m wide; the gates are situated in the middle of the four walls. The cover
tumulus is 46.5m high, 231m long from the east to the west, and 234m long from
the south to the north. According to the historical record, the funeral objects
were quite abundant, including gold and silver, birds and beasts, fish and
turtles, cattle, horse, tiger, leopard, etc. There were altogether 290 kinds of
animals in the mausoleum. Some maids-in-waiting were also put in the mausoleum.
Besides, the jade box, jade crutch presented by the king of Tang Qu and a gold
box full of 30 volumes of classics that Emperor Wudi had read were buried
together with them. When Emperor Wudi was buried, the funerary objects had
already chocked up the space of the coffin chamber, leaving no room for any
other stuffs.
Around the Maoling Mausoleum scatter the
satellite tombs of the emperor's concubines, maids-in-waiting, ministers and
royal relatives. There are still more than 20 tombs extant, including the tombs
of Wei Qing, Huo Guang, Quo Qubing and Jin Ribei. Many cultural relics were
found in this area, such as the fancy black jade knocker-holder with patters of
animals, the steel rhinoceros wine vessel with pattern of clouds, and large
airbricks and tiles carved with characters, patterns of red sparrow, dragon, and
geometrical design. In 1981, more than 230 pieces of cultural relics were found
in the eastern satellite tombs, such as the gold-plating copper horse,
gold-plated and silver-plated bamboo smoke stoves and copper warming stoves.
They are all rare art treasures. Now hundreds of the unearthed cultural relics
found in the mausoleum are on display in the Maoling Mausoleum Museum.