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CHINA ARQUEOLOGIA golden-age-chinese-archayeolog

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Excavation photograph of

the main chamber of the

King of Nanyue's tomb.

BURIAL PRACTICES AND BELIEFS

In the years since the discovery of the tombs of Liu Sheng and of the King of Nanyue, other

large and complex rock-cut tombs have been found — at Xuzhou in Jiangsu province (the capital

of the Han kingdom of Chu), at Qufu in Shandong province (the kingdom of Lu), and at

Yongcheng in Henan province (the kingdom of Liang) — all of them far more complex than the

earlier finds. 2

In contrast to tombs of earlier periods, which were dug vertically into soft earth, especially

in the loess regions of the Yellow River, the magnificent Han tombs were laboriously tunneled

into rocky hillsides along a horizontal axis. Chambers associated with specific functions

branched off from the central passages. These tombs were not simple repositories; rather, they

were palaces for kings and princes in the afterlife, supplied with the utensils of daily life, often

in ceramic and lacquer, but also in gilded bronze, silver, and even gold. Objects that may have

been used for rites connected with the spirits — incense burners, lamps, mirrors, and braziers

— were also part of the tomb furnishings, but bronze ritual vessels for offerings to ancestors, so

abundant in tombs predating the Western Han period, do not appear to the same extent in the

rock-cut tombs.

411 | TOMB OF THE KING OF NANYUE

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