typeface
large
in
Small
Turn off the lights
Previous bookshelf directory Bookmark Next

Chapter 504

 Digging out two firecrackers with inscriptions from the garbage pile in the right ear room is a big gain.

The two brothers each carried a dog-beating stick temporarily and came to the door of the main tomb.

The stone door of the main tomb chamber is equipped with an inner qianjin, which is fastened with iron rods inside.

When it was built, the iron bars inside were erected.

When the stone door was closed, it vibrated, and the iron bar crossed over and "locked" it inside. This was the simplest anti-theft device, and it couldn't stop the Lu Fei brothers at all.

Take out a soft thin steel wire from the bag, pull it with a sleeve and insert it along the gap. After a few tests, you find the position of the jack, then wrap the wire back, pinch both ends and pull upward, and the jack will stand up again.

At the same time, with a hard push, the main tomb chamber that had been sealed in dust for hundreds of years was finally exposed.

The door of the main tomb opened, and Lu Fei and the others did not dare to be careless and quickly retreated to a distance, quietly waiting for the air to circulate.

After about twenty minutes, the two came to the door again. .??.

Shining a flashlight into it, the two brothers gasped.

The main tomb is six meters wide and eight meters long, with an oversized black lacquered solid wood coffin placed in the middle.

This coffin is nearly three meters long, about 1.8 meters high, and over 1.5 meters wide.

You know, this is not a coffin, it's just a coffin.

Such a large size is really rare.

The walls on both sides are covered with murals, and there are quite a few funerary objects on the ground.

After confirming that there were no traps, Lu Fei entered the main tomb first.

Don't worry about anything else, just take a look at the mural.

Due to oxidation, most of the painting on the mural has faded, but the content is clearly visible.

The murals in the tomb basically record the life of the tomb owner. From right to left, Lu Fei exclaimed after taking a look at them.

"It's actually him?"

At the beginning on the right, there is a burly young man standing in front of a magnificent mansion with his hands clasped behind his hands.

<
br> A horizontal plaque "Pingxi Houfu" hangs high on the door beam of the mansion.

Next, there is this young man wearing golden armor standing on the generals' stage, holding a tiger charm and counting generals. Next to him is a big flag fluttering in the wind, with the four characters "Yunnan General Soldier" written on it.

Seeing this, Lu Fei already knew the identity of the tomb owner, but he was deeply puzzled.

Then looking down, there is a scene of this young man holding a white dragon horse on his crotch and holding a bright silver gun, leading thousands of troops to fight against ethnic minorities in strange costumes.

On the other wall, there was also a battlefield at the beginning. It was a scene of the young man leading his team in a fierce battle with the Burmese.

At the end, there was the scene of this man's death. The whole army knelt down and worshiped, and relatives mourned all over the place.

The characters in the entire picture are extremely vivid, especially the battlefield scenes, giving people an immersive feeling.

After reading the mural, Lu Fei let out a long breath, and at the same time, the name of the tomb owner was about to come out.

This is the son of Pingxihou Muying, the founding general of the Ming Dynasty. He is hereditary Pingxihou and is in charge of the military affairs of Yunnan, Muchun.

The scene at the beginning of the mural is exactly what Mu Chun looked like when he succeeded Mu Ying as the hereditary Marquis of Pingxi.

That year, Muchun was just twenty-four years old.

What follows next is the scene in the 26th year of Hongwu, when Vimalakia and other eleven villages started a rebellion, and Muchun ordered his generals for the first time, sending General Qu Neng to lead his army to seek peace.

What follows is a scene of Muchun personally leading troops to conquer and fight.

In the twenty-seventh year of Hongwu's reign, Mu Chun pacified the Yuexi barbarians and established the Lancang Guard.

In the winter of the same year, Yuezhou Guard Tumu Azi rebelled again, and Mu Chun and the governor Qianshi He Fu joined forces to attack.

Mu Chun suggested: "This thief who has been stubborn for many years has married the chiefs of the land and gone into hiding. Now all the chiefs have been sent to join the army, tied to them, and many camps and forts have been set up."

, to control the people who come out, it is necessary to give them the head."

So he rushed to Yuezhou, divided his troops into several groups and attacked the city. He secretly ambush the elite soldiers and used weak soldiers to lure Aziz's troops to pursue him. After they entered the encirclement, they ordered the ambush troops to attack and defeated Aziz.

Aziz fled to the valley. Muchun secretly made friends with nearby local officials to detect his location, and used tree barriers to cut off the food routes of Aziz and others, making them even more embarrassed.

Soon after, Muchun suddenly launched an attack on his camp, captured Aziz alive, and killed Aziz and 240 of his followers. The rebellion in Yuezhou ended.

At this time, Nong Zhenyou, the chieftain of Guangnan, united with the Dangbarbarians to resist the Ming army. Mu Chun led his troops to attack, captured Nong Zhenyou and others alive, and killed thousands of prisoners.

The chieftain of Ningyuan, Dao Bailan, attached himself to Annan and refused to obey the orders of the court. Mu Chun sent He Fu to march against him and forced Dao Bailan to surrender.

Next is the Buran River battlefield.

In the 30th year of Hongwu's reign, Silunfa, the envoy of Pingyang and Burma in Luchuan, was expelled by his subordinate Dao Qianmeng and fled to Yunnan.

Mu Chun brought Silunfa to the Hajj. After receiving Taizu's strategy, he was appointed as the former general to conquer the captives (the first general to conquer the south). With the governors He Fu and Xu Kai as deputy generals, he commanded the Yunnan and Sichuan armies going south.

In December, Taizu Zhu Yuanzhang ordered Silunfa to temporarily station in Nujiang.

In May of the 31st year of Hongwu period, Mu Chun arrived in Pingyang and Burma. Implementing the strategy of courtesy first and troops second, he first sent troops to escort Silunfa to Jinzhi, and ordered Daoqian Meng to come to greet him, but Daoqian Meng did not reply.

Muchun then selected five thousand soldiers and ordered them to lead He Fu and Qu Neng. He ordered them to cross Gaolianggong Mountain and march directly to Nandian, where they defeated the rebels and killed the local chieftain named Meng with a sword. They gained a lot.

He Fu and others returned to attack Jinghan Village. The rebels relied on the favorable terrain to hold on high. The Ming army was about to run out of food and grass, but the rebels' morale was high. He Fu quickly called for help to Muchun.

After Muchun heard the news, he personally led 500 cavalry to rescue him. He arrived at the Nujiang River overnight, crossed the river at dawn the next day, and went straight to the front of Jinghan Village.
The cavalry were ordered to gallop in front of the stronghold and "cover the sky with dust" as a warning.

When the rebels learned that Ming reinforcements had arrived, they were shocked and surrendered.

Muchun took advantage of the victory to attack Kongtong Village, but the rebels in the village fled at night.

In this battle, the Ming army surrendered 70,000 people. The soldiers wanted to massacre them all, but Muchun refused.

After the war, Dao Ganmeng requested to surrender, but Zhu Yuanzhang thought he was capricious and refused, and still ordered Muchun to lead the army to attack.

On September 12, the thirty-first year of Hongwu's reign, Muchun died of illness due to overwork. He was only thirty-six years old.

This is the life of the owner of the tomb. For the sake of the Ming Dynasty, the unparalleled hero died of exhaustion at the age of thirty-six. Pingxi Hou Muchun.

After Mu Chun's death, the newly ascended Emperor Jianwen Zhu Yunwen gave Mu Chun the posthumous title "Huixiang".

What puzzled Lu Fei was that although Mu Jiagong was guarding Yunnan in Sheji, after his death, he was buried in Jinling Stone City with special permission from the emperor.

In the 1950s, Kang Yonghai, known as the number one tomb robber in Jinling, destroyed the Mu family tomb.

The Jinling government solved the case in a timely manner and moved all the bones of the Mu family to Guanyin Mountain for reburial and named it "Jiangjun Mountain". This is something everyone knows. Isn't Mu Chun among them?

Lu Fei thought about it, and it seemed that there really was no Muchun. It turned out that this outstanding man was buried here!

No wonder there are so many Pu'er teas in the Zuoer room. Historical records record that Muchun was the most loyal fan of Pu'er tea.

It’s okay to drink without wine, but you can’t drink without Pu’er tea.

According to folklore, drinking tea in Muchun is like taking drugs, and you can drink up to a pound a day.

If you don't drink tea, you will feel listless and restless like an addict.

So it makes perfect sense that thirty-six boxes of top-quality Pu'er would be buried with such a tea lover.


This chapter has been completed!
Previous Bookshelf directory Bookmark Next