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Terra Cotta Soldiers on the March

A traveling exhibition of China's terra cotta warriors sheds new light on the ruler whose tomb they guarded

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  • By Arthur Lubow
  • Smithsonian magazine, July 2009, Subscribe
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Terra cotta soldiers
The 1974 discovery of buried vaults at Xi'an filled with thousands of terra cotta warriors stunned the world. (O. Louis Mazzatenta / NGS Image Collection)

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Qin Shi Huangdi

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Uncovering the Terra Cotta Soldiers

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In March 1974, a group of peasants digging a well in drought-parched Shaanxi province in northwest China unearthed fragments of a clay figure—the first evidence of what would turn out to be one of the greatest archaeological discoveries of modern times. Near the unexcavated tomb of Qin Shi Huangdi—who had proclaimed himself first emperor of China in 221 B.C.—lay an extraordinary underground treasure: an entire army of life-size terra cotta soldiers and horses, interred for more than 2,000 years.

The site, where Qin Shi Huangdi's ancient capital of Xianyang once stood, lies a half-hour drive from traffic-clogged Xi'an (pop. 8.5 million). It is a dry, scrubby land planted in persimmon and pomegranate—bitterly cold in winter and scorching hot in summer—marked by dun-colored hills pocked with caves. But hotels and a roadside souvenir emporium selling five-foot-tall pottery figures suggest that something other than fruit cultivation is going on here.

Over the past 35 years, archaeologists have located some 600 pits, a complex of underground vaults as yet largely unexcavated, across a 22-square-mile area. Some are hard to get to, but three major pits are easily accessible, enclosed inside the four-acre Museum of the Terracotta Army, constructed around the discovery site and opened in 1979. In one pit, long columns of warriors, reassembled from broken pieces, stand in formation.With their topknots or caps, their tunics or armored vests, their goatees or close-cropped beards, the soldiers exhibit an astonishing individuality. A second pit inside the museum demonstrates how they appeared when they were found: some stand upright, buried to their shoulders in soil, while others lie toppled on their backs, alongside fallen and cracked clay horses. The site ranks with the Great Wall and Beijing's Forbidden City as one of the premier tourist attractions within China.

For those unable to make the journey to Xi'an, some of the choicest specimens unearthed there form the centerpiece of two successive traveling exhibitions that survey the reign of Qin Shi Huangdi (221 B.C.-210 B.C.). "The First Emperor," organized by the British Museum, debuted in London before moving to the High Museum in Atlanta. A second show, "Terra Cotta Warriors," then opened at the Bowers Museum in Santa Ana, California. It is now at the Houston Museum of Natural Science through October 18, and then moves to the National Geographic Society Museum in Washington, D.C. for display from November 19 to March 31, 2010.

In addition to showcasing recent finds, the exhibitions feature the largest collection of terra cotta figures ever to leave China. The statuary includes nine soldiers arranged in battle formation (armored officers, infantrymen, and standing and kneeling archers), as well as a terra cotta horse. Another highlight is a pair of intricately detailed, ten-foot-long bronze chariots, each drawn by four bronze horses. (Too fragile to be transported, the chariots are represented by replicas.) The artifacts offer a glimpse of the treasures that attract visitors from around the world to the Xi'an museum site, where 1,900 of an estimated 7,000 warriors have been disinterred so far.

The stupendous find at first seemed to reinforce conventional thinking—that the first emperor had been a relentless warmonger who cared only for military might. As archaeologists have learned during the past decade, however, that assessment was incomplete. Qin Shi Huangdi may have conquered China with his army, but he held it together with a civil administration system that endured for centuries. Among other accomplishments, the emperor standardized weights and measures and introduced a uniform writing script.

Recent digs have revealed that in addition to the clay soldiers, Qin Shi Huangdi's underground realm, presumably a facsimile of the court that surrounded him during his lifetime, is also populated by delightfully realistic waterfowl, crafted from bronze and serenaded by terra cotta musicians. The emperor's clay retinue includes terra cotta officials and even troupes of acrobats, slightly smaller than the soldiers but created with the same methods. "We find the underground pits are an imitation of the real organization in the Qin dynasty," says Duan Qingbo, head of the excavation team at the Shaanxi Provincial Research Institute for Archaeology. "People thought when the emperor died, he took just a lot of pottery army soldiers with him. Now they realize he took a whole political system with him."

Qin Shi Huangdi decreed a mass-production approach; artisans turned out figures almost like cars on an assembly line. Clay, unlike bronze, lends itself to quick and cheap fabrication. Workers built bodies, then customized them with heads, hats, shoes, mustaches, ears and so on, made in small molds. Some of the figures appear so strikingly individual they seem modeled on real people, though that is unlikely. "These probably weren't portraits in the Western sense," says Hiromi Kinoshita, who helped curate the exhibition at the British Museum. Instead, they may have been aggregate portraits: the ceramicists, says Kinoshita, "could have been told that you need to represent all the different types of people who come from different regions of China."


In March 1974, a group of peasants digging a well in drought-parched Shaanxi province in northwest China unearthed fragments of a clay figure—the first evidence of what would turn out to be one of the greatest archaeological discoveries of modern times. Near the unexcavated tomb of Qin Shi Huangdi—who had proclaimed himself first emperor of China in 221 B.C.—lay an extraordinary underground treasure: an entire army of life-size terra cotta soldiers and horses, interred for more than 2,000 years.

The site, where Qin Shi Huangdi's ancient capital of Xianyang once stood, lies a half-hour drive from traffic-clogged Xi'an (pop. 8.5 million). It is a dry, scrubby land planted in persimmon and pomegranate—bitterly cold in winter and scorching hot in summer—marked by dun-colored hills pocked with caves. But hotels and a roadside souvenir emporium selling five-foot-tall pottery figures suggest that something other than fruit cultivation is going on here.

Over the past 35 years, archaeologists have located some 600 pits, a complex of underground vaults as yet largely unexcavated, across a 22-square-mile area. Some are hard to get to, but three major pits are easily accessible, enclosed inside the four-acre Museum of the Terracotta Army, constructed around the discovery site and opened in 1979. In one pit, long columns of warriors, reassembled from broken pieces, stand in formation.With their topknots or caps, their tunics or armored vests, their goatees or close-cropped beards, the soldiers exhibit an astonishing individuality. A second pit inside the museum demonstrates how they appeared when they were found: some stand upright, buried to their shoulders in soil, while others lie toppled on their backs, alongside fallen and cracked clay horses. The site ranks with the Great Wall and Beijing's Forbidden City as one of the premier tourist attractions within China.

For those unable to make the journey to Xi'an, some of the choicest specimens unearthed there form the centerpiece of two successive traveling exhibitions that survey the reign of Qin Shi Huangdi (221 B.C.-210 B.C.). "The First Emperor," organized by the British Museum, debuted in London before moving to the High Museum in Atlanta. A second show, "Terra Cotta Warriors," then opened at the Bowers Museum in Santa Ana, California. It is now at the Houston Museum of Natural Science through October 18, and then moves to the National Geographic Society Museum in Washington, D.C. for display from November 19 to March 31, 2010.

In addition to showcasing recent finds, the exhibitions feature the largest collection of terra cotta figures ever to leave China. The statuary includes nine soldiers arranged in battle formation (armored officers, infantrymen, and standing and kneeling archers), as well as a terra cotta horse. Another highlight is a pair of intricately detailed, ten-foot-long bronze chariots, each drawn by four bronze horses. (Too fragile to be transported, the chariots are represented by replicas.) The artifacts offer a glimpse of the treasures that attract visitors from around the world to the Xi'an museum site, where 1,900 of an estimated 7,000 warriors have been disinterred so far.

The stupendous find at first seemed to reinforce conventional thinking—that the first emperor had been a relentless warmonger who cared only for military might. As archaeologists have learned during the past decade, however, that assessment was incomplete. Qin Shi Huangdi may have conquered China with his army, but he held it together with a civil administration system that endured for centuries. Among other accomplishments, the emperor standardized weights and measures and introduced a uniform writing script.

Recent digs have revealed that in addition to the clay soldiers, Qin Shi Huangdi's underground realm, presumably a facsimile of the court that surrounded him during his lifetime, is also populated by delightfully realistic waterfowl, crafted from bronze and serenaded by terra cotta musicians. The emperor's clay retinue includes terra cotta officials and even troupes of acrobats, slightly smaller than the soldiers but created with the same methods. "We find the underground pits are an imitation of the real organization in the Qin dynasty," says Duan Qingbo, head of the excavation team at the Shaanxi Provincial Research Institute for Archaeology. "People thought when the emperor died, he took just a lot of pottery army soldiers with him. Now they realize he took a whole political system with him."

Qin Shi Huangdi decreed a mass-production approach; artisans turned out figures almost like cars on an assembly line. Clay, unlike bronze, lends itself to quick and cheap fabrication. Workers built bodies, then customized them with heads, hats, shoes, mustaches, ears and so on, made in small molds. Some of the figures appear so strikingly individual they seem modeled on real people, though that is unlikely. "These probably weren't portraits in the Western sense," says Hiromi Kinoshita, who helped curate the exhibition at the British Museum. Instead, they may have been aggregate portraits: the ceramicists, says Kinoshita, "could have been told that you need to represent all the different types of people who come from different regions of China."

The first emperor's capital, Xianyang, was a large metropolis, where he reportedly erected more than 270 palaces, of which only a single foundation is known to survive. Each time Qin Shi Huangdi conquered a rival state, he is said to have transported its ruling families to Xianyang, housing the vanquished in replicas of palaces they had left behind. At the same time, the emperor directed construction of his tomb complex; some 720,000 workers reportedly labored on these vast projects.

Upon the death of his father, Yiren, in 246 B.C., the future Qin Shi Huangdi—then a prince named Ying Zheng who was around age 13—ascended the throne. The kingdom, celebrated for its horsemen, sat on the margin of civilization, regarded by its easterly rivals as a semi-savage wasteland. Its governing philosophy was as harsh as its terrain. Elsewhere in China, Confucianism held that a well-run state should be administered by the same precepts governing a family: mutual obligation and respect. Qin rulers, however, subscribed to a doctrine known as legalism, which rested on the administration of punitive laws.

In his early 20s, Ying Zheng turned for guidance to a visionary statesman, Li Si, who likely initiated many of his sovereign's accomplishments. Under Li's tutelage, Ying Zheng introduced a uniform script (thereby enabling subjects of vastly different dialects to communicate). Standardization, a hallmark of the Qin state, was applied to weaponry as well: should an arrow shaft snap, or the trigger on a repeating crossbow malfunction, the component could be easily replaced. The young ruler also presided over creation of an advanced agricultural infrastructure that incorporated irrigation canals and storage granaries.

With methodical zeal, Ying Zheng set about conquering the warring states that surrounded him in the late third century B.C. As his armies advanced, principalities fell. No one could thwart consolidation of an empire that eventually stretched from parts of present-day Sichuan in the west to coastal regions along the East China Sea. Having unified the entire civilized world as he knew it, Ying Zheng in 221 B.C. renamed himself Qin Shi Huangdi, translated as First Emperor of Qin.

He then invested in infrastructure and built massive fortifications. His road network likely exceeded 4,000 miles, including 40-foot-wide speedways with a central lane reserved for the imperial family. On the northern frontier, the emperor dispatched his most trusted general to reinforce and connect existing border barriers, creating a bulwark against nomadic marauders. Made of rammed earth and rubble, these fortifications became the basis for the Great Wall, most of which would be rebuilt in stone and brick during the 15th century A.D. under the Ming dynasty.

As the grandeur of his tomb complex suggests, Qin Shi Huangdi kept an eye on posterity. But he also longed to extend his life on earth—perhaps indefinitely. Alchemists informed the emperor that magical herbs were to be found on what they claimed were three Islands of the Immortals in the East China Sea. The emissaries most likely to gain entry to this mystical realm, they asserted, were uncorrupted children; in 219 B.C., Qin Shi Huangdi reportedly dispatched several thousand youngsters to search for the islands. They never returned. Four years later, the emperor sent three alchemists to retrieve the herbs. One of them made it back, recounting a tale of a giant fish guarding the islands. Legend has it that the first emperor resolved to lead the next search party himself; on the expedition, the story goes, he used a repeating crossbow to kill a huge fish. But instead of discovering life-preserving elixirs, the emperor contracted a fatal illness.

As he lay dying in 210 B.C., 49-year-old Qin Shi Huangdi decreed that his estranged eldest son, Ying Fusu, should inherit the empire. The choice undercut the ambitions of a powerful royal counselor, Zhao Gao, who believed he could govern the country behind the scenes if a more malleable successor were installed. To conceal Qin Shi Huangdi's death—and disguise the stench of a decomposing corpse—until the travelers returned to the capital, Zhao Gao took on a cargo of salted fish. The delaying tactic worked. Once Zhao Gao managed to return to Xianyang, he was able to operate on his home turf. He managed to transfer power to Ying Huhai, a younger, weaker son.

Ultimately, however, the scheme failed. Zhao Gao could not maintain order and the country descended into civil war. The Qin dynasty outlived Qin Shi Huangdi by only four years. The second emperor committed suicide; Zhao Gao eventually was killed. Various rebel forces coalesced into a new dynasty, the Western Han.

For archaeologists, one indicator that Qin rule had collapsed suddenly was the extensive damage to the terra cotta army. As order broke down, marauding forces raided the pits where clay soldiers stood guard and plundered their real weapons. Raging fires, possibly set deliberately, followed the ransacking, weakening support pillars for wooden ceilings, which crashed down and smashed the figures. Some 2,000 years later, archaeologists discovered charring on the walls of one pit.

Throughout recorded Chinese history, the first emperor's Ebang Palace—its site on the Wei River, south of ancient Xianyang, was not investigated until 2003— was synonymous with ostentation. The structure was said to have been the most lavish dwelling ever constructed, with an upper-floor gallery that could seat 10,000 and a network of covered walkways that led to distant mountains to the south.

"All Chinese people who can read, including middle- school students, believed that the Qin dynasty collapsed because it put so much money into the Ebang Palace," says archaeologist Duan. "According to excavation work from 2003, we found it was actually never built—only the base. Above it was nothing." Duan says that if the palace had been erected and demolished, as historians thought, there would be potsherds and telltale changes in soil color. "But tests found nothing," says Duan. "It is so famous a symbol of Chinese culture for so long a time, showing how cruel and greedy the first emperor was—and archaeologists found it was a lie." Duan also doubts accounts of Qin Shi Huangdi's expedition for life-prolonging herbs. His version is more prosaic: "I believe that the first emperor did not want to die. When he was sick, he sent people to find special medicines."

The emperor's tomb lies beneath a forested hill, surrounded by cultivated fields about a half-mile from the museum. Out of reverence for an imperial resting place and concerns about preserving what might be unearthed there, the site has not been excavated. According to a description written a century after the emperor's death, the tomb contains a wealth of wonders, including man-made streambeds contoured to resemble the Yellow and Yangtze rivers, flowing with shimmering, quicksilver mercury that mimics coursing water. (Analysis of soil in the mound has indeed revealed a high level of mercury.)

Yet answers about the tomb are not likely to emerge anytime soon. "I have a dream that one day science can develop so that we can tell what is here without disturbing the emperor, who has slept here for 2,000 years," says Wu Yongqi, director of the Museum of the Terracotta Army. "I don't think we have good scientific techniques to protect what we find in the underground palace. Especially if we find paper, silk or textiles from plants or animals; it would be very bad if they have been kept in a balanced condition for 2,000 years, but suddenly they would vanish in a very short time." He cites another consideration: "For all Chinese people, he is our ancestor, and for what he did for China, we cannot unearth his tomb just because archaeologists or people doing tourism want to know what is buried there."

Whatever future excavations reveal about Qin Shi Huangdi's enigmatic nature, some things seem unlikely to change. The emperor's importance as a seminal figure of history won't be diminished. And the mysteries that surround his life will likely never be completely resolved.

Arthur Lubow, who reports frequently on culture and the arts around the world, is based in New York City.


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Related topics: Historically Relevant Artifacts Funerals Ancient Cultures: China China



Additional Sources

The First Emperor: China's Terracotta Army (exhibition catalogue) by Jane Portal with Hiromi Kinoshita, Harvard University Press (Cambridge, Massachusetts), 2007

Terra Cotta Warriors: Guardians of China's First Emperor (exhibition catalogue) by Albert E. Dien with Introduction by Jeffrey Riegel (Bowers Museum, in conjunction with the Houston Museum of Natural Science and the National Geographic Museum), 2008


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Comments (53)

okay this site is sssssooooo awesome it helped me a lot with my history assessment but you may need to put a bibliography on here next time YAY!!! thx a lot yous are really helpful

Posted by bonnie on April 28,2013 | 03:26 AM

This was pretty cool but i think he was a ruthless killing machine

Posted by ted on April 27,2013 | 01:06 AM

terrocota warriors are awesome and interesting!!!!!! =)

Posted by slayer1227 on April 8,2013 | 03:45 PM

I loved it, it helped me finish my report. THANKS!

Posted by Student on March 25,2013 | 04:08 AM

I loved it, it helped me finish my report. THANKS!

Posted by Student on February 9,2013 | 06:37 PM

this so cool and goood aricle i never read this in my life is fun reading arecai that are new and that u never read

Posted by jennifer hernandez on January 24,2013 | 09:11 PM

this thing is so cool i have not never seen these before i would love to see them.

Posted by destiny on January 18,2013 | 12:18 PM

it help me a lot i was looking all over the place for information of terracotta soldiers! thank you a lot!:)

Posted by cristina franseco on January 13,2013 | 10:52 PM

Thank you for the information, it helped me a lot.

Posted by Eli on January 7,2013 | 01:36 PM

wow

Posted by precious on December 14,2012 | 12:33 PM

IT WAS A RANDOM SPOT, THEY NEEDED A WELL SO THEY DUG THERE. THERE IS NOT SOME SECRET STORY ABOUT THEM CALCULATING SPOTS ABOUT A LEGEND.... BRADLY THERE IS YOUR ANSWER

Posted by bob on November 1,2012 | 04:22 PM

can someone please tell me WHY DID THEY START DIGGING THERE??? THANKS

Posted by Bradley on October 19,2012 | 11:52 PM

who were the group of archaeological diggers? and the first people to discover it??

Posted by Bradley on October 19,2012 | 11:44 PM

awesome story please find more artifacts

Posted by Luke Redman on October 11,2012 | 07:43 PM

this is one of the most boring story ever i ever heard

Posted by jessica on September 25,2012 | 12:18 PM

cool

Posted by on August 20,2012 | 10:08 PM

I have just discoverd the terra cotta warriors. I am 9 years old. My mom is off this week and we are having mom camp and our theme is all around the world so each day we spin the globe and choose a place to learn about. Today is China. We found books about China at the library. It was fun learning about the warriors. It makes me want to dig! Ha Ha!

Posted by Hayden Holt on June 19,2012 | 11:11 AM

I am doing a research paper for school, and I was wondering if there is any writings or sites that list artists of the Terra Cotta Warriors or if there are any websites that will help me find any information about the artist or artists.

Thank You Sincerely,
Keifer.

Posted by Keifer on December 7,2011 | 08:19 PM

I am a student at B.A.C im looking for information containing the use and application of tourism statistics,the patterns of tourism demand and flows at china in the forbbiden city.plz for mi research.

Posted by kelebogile on December 1,2011 | 04:09 AM

i am doing a paper on the Terraotta Warriors and this website helped allot more than any other website i looked at. :)

Posted by phillip on November 6,2011 | 04:18 PM

There is an exhibit at the Bowers Museum running until March. The exhibit was facinating. I went this past weekend and spend about two hours going through the tour with the handheld device. Bowers Museum does a nice job. Plus there are people walking around telling information and stories regarding the exhibit.

Posted by Terri Henry on October 31,2011 | 06:19 PM

Where is the Terra Cotta army exhibition now ?

Posted by sandra herrera on October 8,2011 | 03:25 PM

The Warrior Emperor and China's Terracotta Army will launch at the ROM late June 2010. Following this premiere engagement, the exhibition will then travel to the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts in early 2011, followed by Calgary's Glenbow Museum in summer/fall 2011*, and Victoria's Royal BC Museum in late 2011 to 2012.

Posted by A on May 19,2011 | 12:58 PM

Can someone tell me where the Terra Cotta Army will go after Montreal in June of 2011?

Posted by peggy Seybolt on April 6,2011 | 08:50 PM

Sorry, but my understanding is that D.C. was the last US stop. The exhibit ended 3/31/10.

Posted by Maurice J. McCann on May 13,2010 | 01:52 PM

What is the schedule for the terra cotta soldiers once it leaves Washington DC ? I have looked for this information online and on this site and have not found it. Thanks

Posted by Cathy Cassato on May 10,2010 | 05:32 PM

I thought that this article was very long. But it also gave alot of importatn details. & it was iteresting tooo.

Posted by Tania on April 13,2010 | 06:37 PM

I was so disappointed to have missed the soldiers, please let us know where they will next appear after the DC visit. Thx

Posted by Connie on March 16,2010 | 09:34 AM

Please let me know if this exhibition will be in the New York of Boston area after it closes in D.C. If not, were else is it scheduled to be seen? Thank you

Posted by renate zeitlin on March 9,2010 | 02:43 PM

Will the Terra Cotta Warriors tour be in New York City or somewhere in the northeast after it leaves Washington DC?

Posted by c. fedena on March 9,2010 | 01:50 PM

Can someone tell me in which Smithsonian bulding the Chinese terra cotta warriors are shown? We need the address of that building as we hope to visit next week.
thanks!

Posted by Andrea on March 9,2010 | 09:20 AM

I am also looking for information on where the exhibit is going after Washington. I am in New England and would like to know when and if exhibit will be around here.. perhaps New York??

Posted by Dianne Jones on March 5,2010 | 03:01 PM

What is the schedule for the terra cotta soldiers once it leaves Washington DC ? I have looked for this information online and on this site and have not found it. Thanks. Joyce

Posted by joyce webb on January 31,2010 | 01:53 PM

Im doiing a reshearch projct on ancient chinese soldiers anyone have a amazing fun website for me????

Posted by lindsey on January 28,2010 | 12:54 PM

Thats one long story! but it's good.

Posted by Justin Cajigas on January 22,2010 | 05:44 PM

What is the tour schedule for the terra cotta warriors once they leave Washington, DC?

Posted by Mary Caldwell on January 20,2010 | 10:10 PM

WE LIVE IN THE NOTHEAST. NEW YORK BOSTON AREA.WHEN WILL THIS BE NEAR AGAIN PLEASE.

Posted by C DUMAS on January 19,2010 | 08:00 AM

When does the exhibition closes its doors? Thanks.

Posted by Sophie Blavet on January 2,2010 | 09:36 PM

i wish i can see terra cotta warriors

Posted by d0nita on December 4,2009 | 09:14 PM

Lol, I have read some information from this site:
http://www.travelchinaguide.com/attraction/shaanxi/xian/terra_cotta_army/.
This article is also good!

Posted by peter on November 26,2009 | 10:04 PM

this was very fasinating!! i just love ancient china!

Posted by Rebekah Street on November 10,2009 | 07:17 PM

Will exhibition go to anywhere in Florida in the future.

Posted by Jack Cohen on October 5,2009 | 01:16 PM

I saw the Emperor's Warriors in Atlanta earlier this year. It was a profound exhibit. He was barbaric but obviously was a genius or surrounded himself with genius. I have since been compelled to read up on the First Emperor. It was worth the effort.

Posted by Jax on July 29,2009 | 11:25 AM

Where are their weapons?

Posted by C. M. Moore on July 20,2009 | 06:58 PM

Your article "On the March" in the July issue if fascinating. Too bad you did not note that this is not the first time the Terra-cotta Soldiers have been exhibited in the U.S. I visited them in 1988 at the Cleveland Museum of Art. At that time they were part of an exhibition called "Tomb Sculpture of Ancient China, The Quest for Eternity". The Soldiers were exceptionally impressive. I enjoy following Archeology and the photos in your recent article add much to my knowledge, although many of the photos are the same as in the original book published for the 1988 exhibit.

Posted by Barbara Cageao on July 10,2009 | 02:26 PM

this was very accurate

Posted by lara on June 27,2009 | 06:07 PM

I have been fortunate to see these wonderful Terra Cotta figures in China.
They remain among my favorite memories, including the Great Wall and Forbidden City, as well as sights in Germany, Italy, Greece, England, and Ireland! I am thrilled there will be many more able to view these amazing figures!!
Maybe I will have a chance to see them in the States!

Posted by Patricia Travis on June 25,2009 | 05:30 PM

What a well written piece! I'm already planning my trip to DC to see the soldiers.

Posted by Melanie on June 25,2009 | 04:55 PM

Does anyone have a schedule of where this exhibit will be? If so I would appreciate an email. Thanks!

Posted by Casey on June 25,2009 | 09:52 AM

For more information about the exhibit in DC, check out: www.warriorsdc.org or http://theterracottawarriors.wordpress.com/

Tickets are already on sale and are anticipated to sell out quickly!

Posted by National Geographic Museum on June 24,2009 | 12:48 AM

The article states that the terracotta soldiers were discovered by peasantsin 1974 whereas, according to the DISCOVER Science Almanac

Posted by Harold Novikoff on June 24,2009 | 12:18 AM

this was a good story

Posted by on June 22,2009 | 08:24 PM



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