1, the Terracotta Warriors and Horses Museum
The Terracotta Warriors and Horses Museum is located in the east of the city of Lintong District, Xi'an City, Shaanxi Province, is China's first feudal emperor Qin Shihuang Yingzheng's mausoleum in a large from the burial pits, the mausoleum covers an area of 2.18 million square meters. The museum is based on the Terracotta Warriors and Horses of Qin Shi Huang, a site-based museum established on the site of the Terracotta Warriors and Horses Pit, and is China's largest ancient military museum.
2, Big Wild Goose Pagoda
The Big Wild Goose Pagoda is located in the Tang Dynasty Chang'an City Jinchang Square (today's Xi'an City, Shaanxi Province, south of), within the Da Ci'en Temple, also known as "Ci'en Temple Pagoda". Tang Yong Hui three years (652 years), Xuanzang for the preservation of the Scriptures brought back to Chang'an by the Silk Road from Tianzhu Buddha presided over the construction of the Big Wild Goose Pagoda, initially five layers, and then covered to nine layers, and then after the number of layers and the height of a number of changes, and finally fixed for today's seven-storey pagoda, a total height of 64.517 meters, the bottom side of the length of 25.5 meters.
3, Daming Palace
Daming Palace, the Tang Empire's main hall, the political center of the Tang Dynasty and the national symbol, located in Chang'an, the capital of the Tang Dynasty (now Xi'an), the north side of the Longshouyuan. It was built in the eighth year of Emperor Taizong Zhenguan of the Tang Dynasty (634 years), formerly known as Yong'an Palace, is the largest of the three major palaces in Chang'an City of the Tang Dynasty (Daming Palace, Taiji Palace, Xingqing Palace), known as the "East". Since the Tang Emperor Gaozong, 17 Tang emperors dealt with government here for more than 200 years.
4, Weiyang Palace
Weiyang Palace is the main hall of the Western Han Dynasty, built in the seventh year of Emperor Gaozu of Han Dynasty (200 years ago), supervised by Liu Bang's minister Xiao He, built on the basis of the Qin Zhangtai, located in the southwest corner of the highest terrain of the Han Dynasty Chang'an City Longshou Plain, in the city of Chang'an City, due to the west of the Anmen Street, also known as the West Palace.
5, Datang Hibiscus Garden
Datang Hibiscus Garden is located in the city of Xi'an, Shaanxi Province, south of the Qujiang Development Zone, southeast of the Big Wild Goose Pagoda, which is in the original Tang Dynasty Hibiscus Garden site to the north, modeled on the Tang Dynasty Royal Garden style re-construction of China's first all-round demonstration of the full Tang Dynasty style of large-scale royal garden-style cultural theme parks, covering an area of 1,000 acres, of which the water area of three hundred acres.
Expanded InformationThe Terracotta Warriors and Horses of the First Emperor of Qin, a World Heritage Site, one of the Eight Wonders of the World, a national AAAAA-level tourist attraction, and a national key cultural relics protection unit.
The Terracotta Warriors and Horses Museum of Qin Shi Huang*** has three terracotta pits, one, two and three. The first pit is a main military formation with chariots and infantry, with a total area of 14,260 square meters and about 6,000 life-size ceramic figurines.
Pit Two is the cream of the crop of Qin terracotta pits, with an area of 6,000 square meters, consisting of four units, four squares of mixed formations of chariots, cavalry, and crossbowmen in a tightly organized and impeccable manner. Pit three is the command system of the military formation, with an area of 524 square meters.
The Terracotta Warriors and Horses Pit was discovered in 1974-1976, and the Terracotta Warriors and Horses Museum was opened to the public at home and abroad in 1979. The discovery of the Terracotta Warriors was hailed as the eighth wonder of the world and the great discovery in the history of archaeology in the twentieth century.
The Terracotta Warriors and Horses Museum of the First Emperor of Qin, is established on the site of the Terracotta Warriors and Horses pit site museum. Since October 1, 1979 since the opening of the museum, bathed in the national reform and opening up the spring breeze, after hard work, has made brilliant achievements, and become a world-famous large-scale ruins of the museum. Terracotta Warriors and Horses has been hailed as the "Eighth Wonder of the World" and "one of the great discoveries in the history of archaeology in the twentieth century".
In December 1987, UNESCO inscribed the Mausoleum of Qin Shi Huang (including the Terracotta Warriors and Horses) on the World Heritage List. It is a precious cultural treasure not only for the Chinese people but also for all mankind. The establishment and development of the Museum of the Terracotta Warriors and Horses of the First Qin Emperor has gone through ups and downs and hardships, uniting the blood and sweat of many people.
The Big Wild Goose Pagoda, as the earliest and largest surviving four-square pavilion-type brick pagoda of the Tang Dynasty, is a typical material evidence that pagodas, which are the architectural form of Buddhist temples in ancient India, were introduced to the Central Plains with Buddhism and integrated into the Chinese culture, and it is an iconic building that unites the crystallization of the wisdom of the ancient Chinese working people.
On March 4, 1961, the State Council announced the Big Wild Goose Pagoda as the first batch of national key cultural relics protection units.
On June 22, 2014, at the 38th session of the World Heritage Committee of UNESCO in Doha, Qatar, the Big Wild Goose Pagoda was successfully inscribed on the World Heritage List as a site in the "Silk Road: Chang'an-Tian Shan Corridor Network", a joint bid by China, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. World Heritage List.
References:
References: