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The tomb of the King of Qin becomes a vegetable garden, and the cultural relics department: the tomb keeper needs for life, and does not destroy cultural relics

Remembering only to read the old books, when will we join hands in Chang'an!

Known as Chang'an in ancient times, Xi'an is a city full of history and culture. Similarly, as a famous historical and cultural city, there are too many cemeteries here to do, and it is no exaggeration to say that if you find a place to build a road and build a house, you may dig up the cemetery of a prince and nobleman. Here is also buried China's first emperor, shi huang Yingzheng.

The tomb of the King of Qin becomes a vegetable garden, and the cultural relics department: the tomb keeper needs for life, and does not destroy cultural relics

1. Tomb of the King of Qin

The mausoleum of the first emperor of Qin, as the tomb of the emperor who has attracted the world's attention,

No one knows how many rare treasures are buried inside, and modern people can only sigh at this splendid underground palace through the terracotta warriors that have been unearthed. In the ancient capital of Xi'an, of all the tombs of the Qin kings, the Mausoleum of the First Qin Emperor must be the heaviest one, its scale is huge, and it is also a monument to Chinese tombs.

In China, ancient tombs cannot be excavated at will.

Once a well-preserved tomb is found, the state will turn the place into a protective unit and protect it well. The cemeteries involved in archaeology in China are basically because of the patronage of tomb robbers or the unintentional excavation during construction, so they can only excavate those precious cultural relics for rescue. Of course, those ancient tombs that have not been excavated will generally be guarded by special personnel.

The tomb of the King of Qin becomes a vegetable garden, and the cultural relics department: the tomb keeper needs for life, and does not destroy cultural relics

Inside the cemetery

Second, the cemetery is transformed into a vegetable garden

China is a big agricultural country,

Thousands of years of farming tradition have made Chinese always have the idea of farming. In order to grow vegetables, people can rack their brains, and the cracks in floor tiles, foam boxes, hydroponics, etc. have become good places for planting. Even in the community, people will find ways to plant some vegetables that are convenient to feed with potted plants, such as coriander, green onions, etc. But have you ever seen an ancient tomb turned into a vegetable garden?

In Xi'an,

There is a tomb of the Ming Qin King who was jokingly called the new vegetable garden by netizens. This is a tomb of the Ming Qin King who has been transformed into a vegetable garden, and the reason why I say this is because on this Tomb of the Ming Qin King, there are some cemeteries and the surrounding areas of the cemetery, which are planted with vegetables, and people who don't know it think that this is originally a vegetable garden.

The tomb of the King of Qin becomes a vegetable garden, and the cultural relics department: the tomb keeper needs for life, and does not destroy cultural relics

3. Tomb of the Ming Qin King

The tomb of the Ming Qin King and the tomb of the Qin King are not the same,

The Tomb of the King of Ming Qin is the family cemetery of King Pan of Qin in the Ming Dynasty. The first Ming Qin king Zhu Zhu was crowned king of Qin by Zhu Yuanzhang, and was the most powerful of all the clan kings. Moreover, at that time, the Qin Kingdom had the reputation of "the first domain in the world". And this tomb of the Ming Qin King, who is jokingly called the vegetable garden, is the mausoleum of Zhu Huaixi, the tenth king of Qin in the Ming Dynasty.

In the boundary of Xi'an,

There are many more artifacts under the ground than there are above them! Therefore, how to maximize the protection of these cultural relics has become a very important thing. Logically, the area around the cemetery must be carefully protected, but as a precious historical treasure, the cemetery of a generation of clan kings has become a vegetable garden. This is a bit confusing? Isn't this tomb of the Ming Qin King important?

The tomb of the King of Qin becomes a vegetable garden, and the cultural relics department: the tomb keeper needs for life, and does not destroy cultural relics

Stone tiger on the west side of the cemetery Shinto

Fourth, the vegetable garden in the cemetery

As the sixth batch of national key cultural relics protection units, the tomb of the Ming Qin King,

There is a fence built around the cemetery, where there is only one door, basically locked all year round, and only the tomb keeper has the key to open. Obviously, the vegetables in the cemetery were planted by the tomb keepers. He planted not only a vegetable field in the cemetery, but also a vegetable field outside the cemetery. Isn't this not the destruction of cultural relics?

In this regard, the cultural relics department said,

They knew about growing vegetables in the cemetery. For this reason, they believe that this is only the needs of the tomb keeper, and that the place where he planted is only the surface layer. Because there are cultural relics, the residents here have long moved away, only the tomb keeper is here, and there is no one who grows some food, as long as he does not destroy the cultural relics.

The tomb of the King of Qin becomes a vegetable garden, and the cultural relics department: the tomb keeper needs for life, and does not destroy cultural relics

Cemetery

As soon as this statement came out, many netizens said that the official is also a barbaric Buddhist system.

Indeed, vegetables are grown on the surface, basically once a year, but they only provide daily supplies. However, growing food in the cemetery always makes people feel as if something is weird.

epilogue

Although the transformation of the cemetery into a vegetable garden has been controversial, how to deal with it still depends on the relevant departments.

I don't know what people think about growing vegetables in the cemetery?

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