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| » Chinese Ancient Relics » The Sacred way and Stone Statues | ||
The Sacred way and Stone StatuesIn the front part of imperial necropolises there is usually a "sacred way" or "divine road" for the spirits of the royal dead in which the ancients believed to walk on. This road is often lined with stone statues of men and animals,as important decorations of the grounds. The traditional name of the giant-sized statues of men, popularly called "stone men", is strictly wengzhong. It is said that a Herculean giant by the name of Ruan Wengzhong lived in the Qin Dynasty and distinguished himself with great service in garrisoning the borders in Gansu and in fighting the Huns. After he died, Emperor Qin Shi Huang, to commemorate him, had a bronze statue carved in his likeness and erected at this palace I Xianyang. It is also said that , when Huns came to Xianyang and saw the statues, they thought Wengzhong was still alive. After that, all bronze men (and then stone statues) standing guard at palaces and imperial tombs came to be known as Wengzhong. As for the stone animals, they have their origin in
the following historical event: The group of statures is the earliest giant-sized stone sculptures known to stand in front of an ancient tomb in China. Emperors in later epochs, taking their cue from this, had stone men and animals made for their own tombs, and they are now a common sight to greet visitors to imperial mausoleums of the Tang, Song, Ming and qing dynasties. The group of giant stone figures that stand on the grounds of the
Ming tombs near Beijing are the best preserved, the most true-to-life
and most skillfully carved of their kind. |
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