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The incredible history of China's terracotta warriors - Megan Campisi and Pen-Pen Chen

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    What happens after death?
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    Is there a restful paradise?
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    An eternal torment?
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    A rebirth?
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    Or maybe just nothingness?
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    Well, one Chinese emperor thought
    that whatever the hereafter was,
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    he better bring an army.
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    We know that because in 1974,
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    farmers digging a well
    near their small village
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    stumbled upon one of the most important
    finds in archeological history:
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    vast underground chambers
    surrounding that emperor's tomb,
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    and containing more than 8,000
    life-size clay soldiers ready for battle.
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    The story of the subterranean army
    begins with Ying Zheng,
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    who came to power as the king
    of the Qin state at the age of 13
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    in 246 BCE.
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    Ambitious and ruthless,
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    he would go on to become
    Qin Shi Huangdi,
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    the first emperor of China
    after uniting its seven warring kingdoms.
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    His 36 year reign
    saw many historic accomplishments,
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    including a universal system
    of weights and measures,
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    a single standardized writing script
    for all of China,
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    and a defensive barrier that would
    later come to be known as the Great Wall.
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    But perhaps Qin Shi Huangdi
    dedicated so much effort
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    to securing his historical legacy
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    because he was obsessed
    with his mortality.
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    He spent his last years
    desperately employing alchemists
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    and deploying expeditions
    in search of elixirs of life
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    that would help him achieve immortality.
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    And as early as the first year
    of his reign,
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    he began the construction of a massive
    underground necropolis
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    filled with monuments, artifacts,
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    and an army to accompany him
    into the next world
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    and continue his rule.
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    This magnificent army is still standing
    in precise battle formation
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    and is split across several pits.
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    One contains a main force
    of 6,000 soldiers,
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    each weighing several hundred pounds,
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    a second has more than 130 war chariots
    and over 600 horses,
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    and a third houses the high command.
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    An empty fourth pit suggests
    that the grand project
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    could not be finished
    before the emperor's death.
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    In addition, nearby chambers contain
    figures of musicians and acrobats,
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    workers and government officials,
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    and various exotic animals,
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    indicating that Emperor Qin
    had more plans for the afterlife
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    than simply waging war.
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    All the figurines are sculpted
    from terracotta, or baked earth,
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    a type of reddish brown clay.
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    To construct them, multiple workshops
    and reportedly over 720,000 laborers
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    were commandeered by the emperor,
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    including groups of artisans who molded
    each body part separately
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    to construct statues as individual as
    the real warriors in the emperor's army.
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    They stand according to rank
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    and feature different weapons
    and uniforms,
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    distinct hairstyles and expressions,
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    and even unique ears.
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    Originally, each warrior was painted
    in bright colors,
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    but their exposure to air
    caused the paint to dry and flake,
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    leaving only the terracotta base.
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    It is for this very reason that another
    chamber less than a mile away
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    has not been excavated.
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    This is the actual tomb of
    Qin Shi Huangdi,
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    reported to contain palaces,
    precious stones and artifacts,
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    and even rivers of mercury
    flowing through mountains of bronze.
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    But until a way can be found to expose it
    without damaging the treasures inside,
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    the tomb remains sealed.
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    Emperor Qin was not alone in wanting
    company for his final destination.
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    Ancient Egyptian tombs contain clay models
    representing the ideal afterlife,
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    the dead of Japan's Kofun
    period were buried
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    with sculptures of horses and houses,
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    and the graves of the Jaina island
    off the Mexican coast
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    are full of ceramic figurines.
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    Fortunately, as ruthless as he was,
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    Emperor Qin chose to have servants
    and soldiers built for this purpose,
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    rather than sacrificing living ones
    to accompany him,
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    as had been practiced in Egypt,
    West Africa, Anatolia,
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    parts of North America
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    and even China during
    the previous Shang and Zhou dynasties.
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    And today, people travel from all over
    the world to see these stoic soldiers
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    silently awaiting their battle orders
    for centuries to come.
Title:
The incredible history of China's terracotta warriors - Megan Campisi and Pen-Pen Chen
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:32

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