Wednesday, July 3, 2019

A trip to China - Day 5 - Xi'an, and The Terracotta Warriors and Horses


Day 5  The Terracotta Warriors and Horses

Terracotta Warriors and Horses Museum.


The first impression is the size of the car park and the number of buses parked in the lot, and a hell of a lot more outside up the road an off on side streets.  Obviously, it costs money to park in the parking lot.

The other first impressions; the numbers waiting to get in were not as many as yesterday outside the forbidden city, in fact, a lot less.

Be warned there's a long walk from the entrance gate where your bags are scanned and a body scan as well, before admittance.  This walk is through a landscaped area which it is expect might sometime in the future reveal more soldiers, or other artefacts.

At the end of the walk that takes about ten minutes, you can get a one-way ride to the second checkpoint, but we opted not to as no one else in our group did.

That walk is the warm-up exercise to an organised viewing of the exhibits after going through a second ticket checkpoint.  On the other side, we had to hand our tickets back to the tour guide which was disappointing not to end up with a memento of actually having been there.

So, on the other side in the courtyard, the guide told us the most important parts of the exhibition, that we should spend most of the time looking at pit 1, and then spent a little time in 2 which is only there in the first stages of excavation.  Then move onto the museum if only to see the replica chariots.

We do.

The chariots were small but interesting



The horses were better and intricately detailed



These are soldiers, perhaps complete examples of those types found in the end pit.



This is one of the archers.  You can tell by the way he wears his hair.

Pit 2


The excavation of this pit has only just begun, so it is possible to see where they have carefully removed the top cover, and you can see the broken parts of the warriors lying in a heap.



Some parts of the warriors are more discernible closer up



These parts are carefully extracted and taken to the ‘hospital’ where they are digitised and the computer will match each part with the warrior it belongs to.

Pit 1

This has quite a number of standing soldiers that have been glued back together, but not necessarily complete and I notice a number if the statues were incomplete. And if they cannot find the missing pieces, then they are not added to or filled in.



The scale of the pit is enormous, and they have hardly scratched the surface in the restoration process.

What is there is a number of horses as well.



That's at the front of the pit, a long line of statues, and what is clear is the location of the well where the first fragments were found by a farmer.

There are about eight lines of soldiers, and some lining the sides.

Midway down there is a large area currently under excavation



At the back is the hospital where the soldiers are reassembled.  There's nearly a hundred in the various stages of rebuilding.  These days the soldiers are rebuilt using computer imaging.



The hospital area is where they are put back together



And these are some of the statues in various stages of reconstruction



Another two views of the size and scale of the reconstruction project





The coffee shop is also a sales centre, but there are too many people waiting for coffee and too few places to sit down.


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