Job Recruitment Website - Job seeking and recruitment - Where is Tang Ji's tomb located?

Where is Tang Ji's tomb located?

Tangji Tomb is a cultural tourist attraction.

Tangji Tombs are located in Pengshan, Tangji Village, Dasha Town, Guangzhou. 1994 Three tombs were discovered and cleared.

Tomb No.1 is a single-room roof tomb in the east, with a length of 5. 15m, a width of 1.52m, and a height of 1.43m .. north. There are lampstands on the voucher walls on both sides of the tomb, and niches are built on the back wall. The coffin skeleton is all rotten, leaving only iron coffin nails. There are 5/kloc-0 funerary objects. There are gold bracelets, copper bracelets, copper rings, gold-plated silver hair pins, copper hair pins, bronze mirrors and celadon pots, cans, ear cups, plates and barrels.

Tomb 2 is to the west of tomb 1. On the plane, it is in the shape of Chinese characters, with a total length of 7.18m. It is divided into three parts: aisle, front room and coffin room, and there is a niche behind it. There are many tomb bricks between the tomb door and the voucher wall, on which are printed the words "bricks made by the family on the fifteenth day of the first month of Yongjia" and "nine hundred" and their inscriptions (in). The funerary objects include green glazed pots, printed pots, kettle pots, plates, bowls, chicken coops, stables, stoves, paddy fields and other models, as well as residual iron swords, copper coins and beads.

Tomb No.3 is located in the west and well preserved. The tomb is divided into five parts: tunnel, front room, west ear room, aisle and coffin room. The total length is 8.52 meters, and the roof is covered with coupons. Among them, the west wing is made of Jin bricks (the same as tomb bricks No.1 and No.2), and the rest rooms are old tomb bricks in the late Eastern Han Dynasty. On the side of the brick, there are printed Chinese characters and geometric patterns, and several pieces are printed with Yangtze patterns such as "Four Years of Xiping", "Four Years of April" and "Prosperous Official Transportation". Every room has funerary objects. There are models of paddy fields, cowsheds, wells and pigsty in the corridor. The front room is 2.03 meters long and 2.62 meters wide, and there are lampstands at the four corners. There are _ _ _ _, earring plates, cups, four-ear jars and other blue glazed utensils in the room. There is a small niche in the east wall with a small jar built in. The left atrial appendage of the anterior chamber is 1.76 m long and 1 m wide. There are copper pots with iron feet, copper pots with iron feet, green glazed pots, bowls and pots in the room. There is an aisle behind the front room connected with the coffin room. The tomb is 3.48m long and1.86m wide, with a niche behind it. The wooden coffin and skeleton are rotten, and many copper coffin nails are scattered all over the floor. There are gold hairpin, bronze mirror, small copper ear cup, iron chisel, tweezers, scissors, inkstone and Mo Ding at the head of the tomb. There is also a talc nameplate engraved with the words "General Xuanwei, a captain of the dentist in Shanhaiguan Pass, and Lianggai, Xiqing County, Zengcheng County, Nanhai County, is 60 years old" and a talc signboard engraved with the words "General Xuanwei, a captain of the dentist in Shanhaiguan Pass, visits again". In the middle, there are the silver seal of the turtle button "tooth door seal" and the talc seal of "inside the customs", the talc pig, the copper belt hook and the copper crossbow machine. There are iron ring-headed knives and ring-headed swords at the back, and a full set of gold-plated copper belts; A green glazed tiger and a copper basin are placed next to the back niche.

The blue glaze and pottery unearthed from these three tombs are similar in shape, glaze color and production characteristics. The brick of Tomb No.2 can be traced back to the first year of Yongjia (307), and the brick of Tomb No.3 can be traced back to the fourth year of Xiping (175), belonging to the last year of the Eastern Han Dynasty, which is 132 years away from the first year of Yongjia, indicating that the builder of Tomb No.3 removed a large number of old bricks from an Eastern Han tomb to build a tomb.