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The front chamber of Cao Cao's mausoleum
in Anyang county, Henan province.(Photo: China Daily) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, Jan. 7 -- Excavation of Three Kingdoms ruler
Cao Cao's tomb is posing as many questions as it answers.
When archaeologists revealed last month the discovery
of Cao Cao's tomb it aroused a lot of interest in the legendary ruler, but also
doubts.
Cao is a historical character who played an important
role during the Three Kingdoms period (AD 220-280) and was also known as "King
Wu of Wei (Kingdom)".
Soon after confirmation of the discovery of Cao's
mausoleum in Xigaoxue, a village in Anyang county, Henan province, on Dec 27,
the skeptics started raising questions.
They said the austere burial site did not tally with
the legend of him building up to 72 tombs to thwart tomb raiders.
"We did expect doubt and controversy," says
archaeologist Liu Qingzhu of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS), one
of the leaders of the excavation team. "We've been thinking about revealing our
findings to the public for six months. But we thought it would be better to come
up with solid evidence first."
By solid evidence, Liu means sound archaeological
reasoning about the tomb's location, layout, and sacrificial offerings bearing
the inscription: "Personal belongings frequently used by King Wu of Wei."
While this evidence has convinced some people, others
remain skeptical. They point to the six-year difference between Cao's recorded
age upon death, 66, and the male figure unearthed from the tomb, whose age is
estimated to be at most 60, derived from analyzing his skull and teeth.
Netizens began calling for a DNA test and someone who
declared himself Cao's descendant said he would be prepared to take such a test.
Experts retorted no one can be sure they are Cao's
descendant after 1,800 years.
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A stone pillow with the inscription,
"Personal belongings frequently used by King Wu of Wei" unearthed from the
tomb. (China Daily/File photos) Photo Gallery>>> |
Li Meitian, deputy professor of history from Beijing
Normal University, says if the skeleton of Cao Zhi, one of Cao's sons, can be
found then comparison of their DNA would suffice as evidence that Cao Cao is the
real deal.
Cao Zhi's tomb was discovered and unearthed in 1951,
yielding 28 bones, but these were misplaced.
"Unfortunately we have no idea of the whereabouts of
Cao Zhi's bones," says Liu Yuxin, director of the Cultural Relics Administration
of Dong'e County, Shandong province.
"Even if we had Cao Zhi's bones, I don't think a DNA
test would be a good idea," says archaeologist Wang Minghui from CASS, a human
bone identification expert, who identified the skeleton unearthed from Cao Cao's
tomb. He says a DNA test would damage the bones.
Then, after tourists and journalists visited the
excavation site during the New Year holiday they found there are actually two
tombs being excavated.
Alongside the mausoleum believed to be Cao Cao's is
another tomb built with a similar layout, just 70 m away.
"We didn't mention the other tomb (at the press
conference) because the excavation of that tomb had just started," says Hao
Benxing, a researcher from the Henan Provincial Cultural Relics Administration.
"We haven't recovered any relics worth mentioning."
Even so, it is thought the smaller tomb might contain
confirmation of Cao's ownership of the bigger tomb.
In the bigger tomb, there were also remains of two
females, one estimated to be 50, the other between 20 and 25. Experts thought
the older female was Cao's wife, buried 10 years later, in accordance with
historical records.
But there is a disparity between Cao's wife's
recorded age upon death, 60, and that identified by skull and teeth
identification of the older female.
So, if the smaller tomb contains remains of a female
aged 60, Cao's wife, ownership of the bigger tomb would be much less
controversial because it would prove that she was indeed "buried alongside" with
him as historical record puts it, says professor Liu Xinchang from Handan
Research Institute of History and Culture, Hebei province.
He says the archaeologists could have waited three
months to find this out.
Archaeologist Liu Qingzhu responds they "waited long
enough".
"After one year of excavation and research, we've
secured enough evidence to make our conclusion. Secondly, news of the excavation
reached some of the media," Liu says.
"It is Cao Cao who we are talking about here. If
speculation began he would appear to be more a legend rather than a character.
We want our findings to reveal historical truth, not to start or repeat a
legend."
(Source: China Daily)