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Located in the eastern suburbs of Chansha, the Mawangdui Han Dynasty Tombs were uncovered in 1972. The tombs, which date back some 2,100 years to the Western Han dynasty (206BC-25AD), contained the remains of the Marquis Dai, his wife and son, and their most prized possessions.
Among the more than 3,000 relics unearthed, were exquisite lacquer-ware, musical instruments, silk paintings, pottery and Chinese medicinal herbs. There was also a complete text of the Daoist classic 'I Ching' written on silk. Of all the remains, the most astonishing was the corpse of Xin ZHui, the Marquess of Dai, which was extremely well preserved. Most of the artifacts including the corpses can now be found in the Hunan Provincial Museum.
Some 2,100 years ago, Xin Zhui enjoyed every luxury that the Han Dynasty had to offer. Xin Zhui lived her life surrounded by lacquer boxes, ornate pottery, musical instruments and an astonishing array of fine textiles. Her tomb, discovered in 1971 in the Changsha suburb of Mawangdui, proved to be a fantastic reliquary of the Western Han artifacts.
Buried with Xin Zhui were all the elegant trappings of her noble existence, perfectly preserved in a timber-lined tomb the size of a swimming pool. All these riches were buried with Xin Zhui to make her stay in the afterlife a more pleasant one. But more astonishing still was the body of the Marquise herself, which was found fully preserved and in remarkable condition, from skin to inner organs.
She may not have had a terra cotta army to escort her into the afterlife, but Xin Zhui certainly would have been well attended once there: Carved wooden figurines, painted and clothed in silk garments, include butlers, handmaidens, and an entire troupe of musicians to keep Xin Zhui entertained. A regiment of wooden soldiers stands on guard to protect her possessions. Actual musical instruments were included as well: A set of twelve pitch pipes to tune Heaven's chamber ensemble, bamboo flutes of various sizes, a 32-pipe mouth organ, and most impressive, a large 25-stringed Zheng, or zither.
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