The Borneo Post (Sabah)

New research shed fresh light on China emperor’s quest for eternal life

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BEIJING: New archeologi­cal research has shed fresh light on China’s first emperor – creator of the world-famous terracotta army – and his quest for eternal life, state media reported.

A set of wooden slips found in the central province of Hunan contain an executive order from emperor Qin Shihuang for a nationwide search for the elixir of life, along with replies from local government­s, according to Xinhua news agency on Sunday.

It cited Zhang Chunlong, a researcher at the provincial institute of archaeolog­y, as saying the emperor’s decree reached even frontier regions and remote villages.

Qin Shihuang’s obsession with eternal life was well-known: he was responsibl­e for the massive undergroun­d mausoleum in the northern province of Shaanxi filled with nearly 8,000 terracotta soldiers built to protect him in the afterlife.

By studying the 36,000 wooden slips – found in 2002 at the bottom of a well in Hunan – archaeolog­ists have uncovered not only the imperial order to find an “elixir of life”, but also the often embarrasse­d responses from local authoritie­s who struggled to meet his demands.

According to Xinhua, a village called ‘Duxiang’ reported to the emperor that it had failed to discover a miraculous potion, but that the search was continuing.

Another place, ‘Langya’, suggested that “an herb collected from an auspicious local mountain” might do the job. — AFP

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