Tengger is close to the Xixia royal tombs. It was the late Yuan and early Ming dynasties. There were still a large number of rare treasures and burial objects in the Xixia royal tombs. There is a saying that the Xixia royal tombs were excavated by the Mongols in retaliation. Uncle Liao and I exchanged opinions.
I don't think this makes sense.
First of all, Genghis Khan died in Liupan Mountain. It was June at that time, and the northwest was very hot. If the body was not transported back for burial as soon as possible, maggots would have grown and rotted away in a few days.
Furthermore, once Genghis Khan died, his sons were busy fighting for the imperial power and had no intention of traveling hundreds of miles to dig the imperial tomb. The entrance to the underground palace of the Western Xia Tomb was buried at a depth of 25 meters, which was very deep and required
If you want to dig out the imperial mausoleum in a short time, you will need at least tens of thousands of troops to dig together. For this, you must also have tens of thousands of hand-supporting tools, such as hoes.
How could he carry a hoe with him? Hundreds of thousands of Mongolian troops came to fight Xixia and fight the war of annihilation. Why would everyone carry a hoe? Impossible.
Therefore, it cannot be the Mongols at that time.
So who was the first to damage and rob the Xixia imperial tomb?
Who has the ability to hollow out the imperial tomb?
After thinking about it, there is only one possibility.
They were the border officers and soldiers in the early Ming Dynasty.
At that time, more than 100,000 people were stationed at the foot of Helan Mountain. The conditions in Pingji Fort and Zhenbei Fort were not very good. Because Zhu Yuanzhang had just founded the country in the early days, there was not much money in the treasury. It was difficult to pay salaries to the imperial officials, and there was no extra money at all.
The border is here.
What to do if you are poor?
Thinking of a way, these Ming troops at the border immediately focused on the Xixia imperial mausoleum with rich burial objects.
After decades of garrisoning, these tens of thousands of people have nothing to do every day. Compared with the Mongolians who came and went in a hurry, they have absolutely enough time to dig and steal slowly. Because no one cares about them, they are not in a hurry.
They believed that one day they would be able to dig down and take out the valuable burial objects of the Xixia Emperor.
As a commander and envoy, Jin A'long is a high-level official here. The Ming army hollowed out the Xixia Mausoleum and obtained a large amount of money and treasures. As a front-line commander, Jin A'long himself also made a lot of money.
The flowers are endless.
In this way, that matter will make sense!
Where did he get that money?
The ability to build an iron coupon-roofed tomb to prevent robbers for his daughter was all obtained from the Xixia imperial mausoleum. Otherwise, with Zhu Yuanzhang's original salary system, even if he received a salary of five hundred years, he would not be able to build an iron coupon-roofed tomb!
I saw three pairs of stone carving boards before. Among the many characters carved on the stone boards, there was a tall man sitting on the main seat. This man was Jin Aaron!
There is a sub-scene on the slate, a woman (Kim Yoo-ja) wearing a haze crown and red clothes. She is normal at first, as if she has just been married. Then the scene changes, she is tied up hand and foot, with disheveled hair and a crazy expression, as if she cannot control herself.
.
What great changes happened to her?
unknown.
Maybe her newly married husband died in the war, or she ran away with another woman, she was pregnant and the child was gone, or her father Jin A'long didn't agree. These are all possibilities.
She is crazy.
If he wasn't crazy, he wouldn't tie her up.
Jin Along tried all means to save her and found the best doctor, but to no avail. In the end, Jin Along attributed the cause of his daughter's madness to ghosts and gods. There will be a tribute table for worshiping ghosts and gods in the main tomb chamber.
This is reflected.
The future development of things.
Through his connections, Jin A'long invited a group of original tantric ascetics taught by Po Po Ke to exorcise ghosts and gods from his daughter, and to make her a normal person. Of course, Jin A'long himself does not rule out that he is Po Po Ke.
A true believer in the religion.
The final scene on the slab.
Eight colorful coffins were carried, and Jin Youzi was buried alive in the desert.
The only explanation for doing this is that the monks of the Po Po Ke religion asked him to do this, and Jin Along agreed for some unknown reason.
On the one hand, Jin Along agreed to the solution given by the monks taught by his mother-in-law Ke and buried his daughter alive. On the other hand, he loved his daughter very much. How could he not love his own daughter!
He couldn't bear to see his daughter starve to death, so he planned it when he built the tomb on the iron roof. He claimed that the tomb built next to it was for himself, so that he could be with his daughter after his death.
Why does the impregnable iron-roofed tomb have a secret passage leading directly to the tomb?
I guess.
This tunnel should have been climbed by Jin Along himself.
It's that simple.
Hundreds of years ago, a father crawled through the corridor with a food box without telling all the monks in Po Po Ke.
Going through a lot of trouble to deliver food to his daughter.