A Great Convergence?
ASIAN Geographic|AG 157
Did the Ancient Greeks help build China's Terracotta Army?
Alex Campbell
A Great Convergence?

In 1974, east of Xi’an in Shaanxi Province, farmers stumbled upon a human face staring up at them macabrely from the soil. They had unknowingly discovered the terracotta warriors safeguarding the tomb of Qin Shi Huang (259–210 BCE). The now-famous funerary art exhibit consists of 8,000 statues armed with their weapons, horses and chariots cast in extraordinary detail, sporting intricate hairstyles and elaborate detailing in their terracotta armour.

When completed, the army was arranged in the pits in a military formation, positioned according to rank and duty. Thus they stood and watched over the tomb of the first emperor of China for over 2,000 years.

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