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| CulturalTravels.com - Home | More Heritage Sites |
Volume 4, July 2002 |
ISSN 1538-893X |
The U.S.'s first WHS One thousand years before the Incas built their stone cities, the Anasazi built cliff dwellings at Mesa Verde, Colorado. Later, they became ghost towns, deserted seemingly overnight sometime in the 1300's. But the remains of this fantastic culture are hauntingly beautiful. Mesa Verde was our May issue's Heritage Site. More 20th-century Discoveries One of the most famous archaeological discoveries of the 20th century was made by the American explorer Hiram Bingham in 1911. Bingham found the Incan mountain city of Machu Picchu in Peru, thought to be a fable by the Spaniards, who could not imagine that a city could be built in such a remote place. Not only was Machu Picchu's location a fantastic tribute to human engineering and determination, its workmanship was astounding. For the Incas were a stone-age people, who managed to build a mountain-top city that housed hundreds of people in safety and relative comfort, The system of roads, terraces, houses and public buildings they constructed there were masterfully fitted together, relying on gravity and precision to give them their strength. A past Heritage Site of the Month, Machu Picchu is a monument to man's ingenuity. |
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A UNESCO World Heritage Site |
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Mausoleum of the First Qin Emperor When the explorer
Howard Carter finally dug his way into the inner chamber of King Tutankhamen’s
tomb in 1923, he was prepared for the worst. All of the previously
discovered tombs of ancient Egyptian monarchs had been looted. Carter
feared he would suffer the same disappointment. As he pushed his head into the royal burial chamber and illuminated it with a torch, his colleagues implored, “Can you see anything?” He replied, “Yes, wonderful things!” Those “wonderful things” – a fully intact, untouched royal tomb more than 3,000 years old – were subsequently hailed as the greatest archaeological find of the 20th century. Thirty centuries after his death, the boy-king, Tut, became a far greater legend than he had been in his own time. Now go forward five decades to Shaanxi Province, China in the 1970s. For years, Chinese archaeologists have been digging around the province pursuing the works of Qin Shi Huangdi (259-210 B.C.), the legendary first emperor of China, the man who united seven warring kingdoms, once and for all, into one nation. Because Shi Huangdi was from the province of Qin, pronounced “chin,” his dynasty was named the Qin, after which China itself came to be called. Shi Huangdi was a ruthless man, utterly devoted to his vision of a unified China, and his success at unification carried enormous costs. On one hand, he standardized Chinese writing and laws, and consolidated the idea of a central government through the construction of roads and fortifications, including the Great Wall of China. On the other hand, he attempted to wipe out the pre-Qin Dynasty past by burning all writings from that period and banning discussions of the past. He killed or exiled dissidents, setting an unfortunate future pattern for China’s sovereigns. By any measure, Shi Huangdi was one of history’s most formidable rulers. However, like many great and charismatic rulers, such as Alexander, his dynasty could not survive his death. Within four years after his passing in 210 B.C., the Han Dynasty had arisen and begun a brilliant, stable 400-year reign. From its start in 221 B.C. to its extinction in 206 B.C., the Shi Huangdi's Qin Dynasty had lasted a mere 15 years.
For all the archaeologists’ efforts to unearth Shi Huangdi’s works, it was farmers digging a well in 1974, almost 2,200 tears after his death, who first discovered Shi Huangdi’s ceramic warriors. Chinese archaeologists soon swarmed to the site. Alas, they soon determined that many of the warrior statues had been broken soon after Shi Huangdi’s death by agents of the Han Dynasty seeking to denigrate his legacy. In the years since, China has patiently and painstakingly restored thousands of the soldiers, who stand smartly in long rows and files along the trenches dug by the archaeologists’ spades. Ironically, Shi Huangdi’s mausoleum, which lies at the center of his necropolis, has yet to be unearthed and opened. In some ways, the find at Shaanxi is more momentous than Carter’s discovery at Giza. King Tut was a minor pharaoh who greatest contribution to history was his uncorrupted tomb. His empire, though it lasted long, was eventually pushed to the margin of human events and then swept away by Rome, and later, Islam. But Qin Shi Huangdi was the organizer and instigator of the Chinese nation. Once he united those seven kingdoms and forced them into a national consciousness, the Chinese embarked on a role in world history that has never been matched by any other nation. Even the rise of the formidable European imperial powers – Spain, France, Britain and the Soviet Union – and the United States’ emergence as the greatest political and economic power in history have only served to underscore China’s longevity. — Patrick Totty |
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