Chinese pyramids
The term Chinese pyramids refers to pyramidal shaped structures in China, most of which are ancient mausoleums and burial mounds built to house the remains of several early emperors of China and their imperial relatives. About 38 of them are located around – north-west of Xi'an, on the Guanzhong Plains in Shaanxi Province. The most famous is the Mausoleum of the First Qin Emperor, northeast of Xi'an and 1.7 km west of where the Terracotta Warriors were found.
Although known in the West for at least a century, their existence has been made controversial by sensationalist publicity in the 20th century.
Earliest tombs
The earliest tombs in China are found just north of Beijing in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region and in Liaoning. They belong to the Neolithic Hongshan culture.The site of Niuheliang in Liaoning contains a pyramidal structure.
Information available in the West
In 1667 the Jesuit Father Athanasius Kircher wrote about Chinese pyramids in his book China monumentis Illustrata.The existence of "pyramids" in China remained little known in the Western world until the 1910s. They were documented in large numbers around Xian, first in 1912 by the Western traders Fred Meyer Schroder and Oscar Mamen, and also in 1913 by the expedition of Victor Segalen. He wrote about the First Emperor's tomb, and about the other mound tombs in the region in his Mission archéologique en Chine : L'art funéraire à l'époque des Han.
Sensational claims
The introduction of pyramids in China to popular attention came soon after World War II. Many early stories were focused on the existence of a "Great White Pyramid". This is the tomb of Emperor Wu of Han located in Xingping, Shaanxi Province.U.S. Army Air Corps pilot James Gaussman is said to have seen a white jewel-topped pyramid during a flight between India and China during World War II. Colonel Maurice Sheahan, Far Eastern director of the Trans World Airline, gave an eyewitness account of his encounter with a pyramid in the March 28, 1947 edition of The New York Times. A photo of Sheahan's pyramid appeared in The New York Sunday News on March 30, 1947. This photograph later became attributed to James Gaussman.
Chris Maier showed that the pyramid in the photo is the Maoling Mausoleum of Emperor Wu just outside Xi'an. Pseudohistorians, through promoting their theories, have increased western awareness of these pyramids. Hartwig Hausdorf speculated it was built by aliens, and Philip Coppens repeated this theory.
Despite claims to the contrary, the existence of these pyramid-shaped tomb mounds was known by scientists in the West before the publicity caused by the story in 1947. Shortly after the New York Times story, Science News Letter published a short item saying: "The Chinese pyramids of that region are built of mud and dirt and are more like mounds than the pyramids of Egypt, and the region is little travelled. American scientists who have been in the area suggest that the height of, more than twice as high as any of the Egyptian pyramids, may have been exaggerated, because most of the Chinese mounds of that area are built relatively low. The location, reported southwest of Sian, is in an area of great archaeological importance, but few of the pyramids have ever been explored."
Some of the pyramids of Xi'an are currently tourist attractions, such as for example the Han Yang Ling Mausoleum of the Western Han Dynasty, and several of them have museums attached to them.
Partial list of mausoleums and tombs in China
Zhou dynasty tombs complex near Luoyang, Henan
- Tomb of King Ling of Zhou
- Tomb of Three Kings of Zhou
Zhao Kings' tombs complex near Handan, Hebei
- Tomb of King of Zhao state
Yan King's burial mounds in Yixian, Hebei
- Burial complex in ancient Xiadu
Qin dynasty mausoleums near Xi'an, Shaanxi
- Tomb of First Emperor in Lintong .This is the largest Chinese burial mound. The original height was, the present height is, and the dimensions are. It was built during the short-lived imperial Qin Dynasty.
- Tomb of Emperor Qin Ershi in Xi'an.
Western Han dynasty mausoleums complex in Xianyang and around Xi'an, Shaanxi
- Tomb of Emperor Wu of Han. The size is x.
- Tomb of Empress Li
- Tomb of Princess Yang Xin
- Tomb of Emperor Zhao of Han
- Tomb of Empress Shangguan
- Tomb of Emperor Cheng of Han
- Tomb of Empress Xu
- Tomb of Consort Ban
- Tomb of Empress Zhao Feiyan
- Tomb of Emperor Ping of Han
- Tomb of Empress Wang
- Tomb of Emperor Yuan of Han
- Tomb of Empress Wang
- Tomb of King Wu of Zhou
- Tomb of King Wen of Zhou
- Tomb of Emperor Ai of Han
- Tomb of Empress Fu
- Tomb of Emperor Hui of Han
- Tomb of Empress Zhang Yan
- Tomb of Marquis Zhang Ao
- Tomb of Princess Lu of Yuan
- Tomb of Emperor Gaozu of Han
- Tomb of Empress Lü
- Tomb of Consort Qi
- Tomb of Emperor Jing of Han
- Tomb of Empress Wang
- Tomb of Emperor Wen of Han
- Tomb of Empress Dou
- Tomb of Empress Dowager Bo
- Tomb of Emperor Xuan of Han
- Tomb of Empress Wang
- Tomb of Empress Xu
Eastern Han mausoleums near Luoyang, Henan
Yangling, Shaanxi
- Tomb of Emperor Wen of Sui
Xining, Qinghai
- The Lianhu Altar
Tang dynasty mausoleums in Shaanxi
- Chongling Mausoleum of Emperor Dezong of Tang
- Jinling Mausoleum of Emperor Xianzong of Tang
- Tomb of Princess Chengyang of Emperor Taizong
- Tomb of Princess Xincheng of Emperor Taizong
Mausoleum of Emperor Xiaojing of Tang near Goushi, Henan
- Tomb of Emperor Xiaojing of Tang
- Tomb of Empress Ai
Imperial mausoleums complex of Song dynasty in and around Gongyi, Henan
Elsewhere
- Shou Qiu in Qufu, Shandong – a small pyramidal monument believed to be the birthplace of the Yellow Emperor, located adjacent to the Shaohao Tomb
- Janggun-chong Step Pyramid in Jilin, "Tomb of the General", is supposed to be the mausoleum of King Jangsu , king of Goguryeo, an ancient Korean kingdom. It belongs to the Capital Cities and Tombs of the Ancient Koguryo Kingdom on the World heritage list. Nearby is the Taewang-neung / Taiwangling Pyramid believed to be the burial of King Gwanggaeto the Great ; while twice bigger than Janggun-chong, it is in bad shape and Janggun-chong is touted as the touristic highpoint of the site.
- Shimao a Neolithic site in Shenmu County, Shaanxi with a large stepped pyramid with palaces at its top and used also for artisan or industrial work
- The Western Xia tombs of the Tangut Empire near Yinchuan in Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, northwestern China, a large number of tombs covering some are referred to as 'Chinese Pyramids'.