The Terracotta Army – THE FACES OF TERRACOTTA WARRIORS – Ancient China – Part 2



The real faces of the Xian Terracotta warriors who fought during the Warring States period in Ancient China which ultimately led to the Qin state’s victory in 221 BC as the first unified Chinese empire, known as the Qin dynasty. The Terracotta Army’s history dates all the way back to some 2,200 years ago. The construction began in 246 BC. The Terracotta Army was designed to guard the first Emperor of China, Qin Shi Huang in the afterlife. Over 720,000 laborers worked for approximately 40 years to complete it.

Special thanks to the Institute for Planets 星球研究所 for providing some useful information to this project.

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21 thoughts on “The Terracotta Army – THE FACES OF TERRACOTTA WARRIORS – Ancient China – Part 2”

  1. How completely amazing!! I'd say that this Emperor got himself built an even better tomb etc than the Egyptian Pharaoh's! And to think of using Mercury! I was thinking of how many people contributing to the inner tomb would've died from Mercury exposure, until I read when you said that many were killed to keep it secret anyway!! Yikes 😳. Absolutely wonderful though, and cool how different those figures were according to rank, position etc!!

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  2. Cada soldado de Terracota se presupone ,fueron tallados por los artesanos conforme al Real ,ninguno es Igual 🙄😳😦.INCREÍBLE TRABAJO DE EDICIÓN 👋🏻👋🏻🙏

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  3. This is amazing. I have seen these faces many times in documentaries. They explained each soldier was made in the likeness of a soldier in real life. I am late and am saving your video not just for tomorrow but to share with friends. Thank you so much. Regards .

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  4. Surely amazing job😊👏 on historical events in Imperial China. That is still can be more interesting to have known of every Terracotta soldier to be identified with 😃👍(big/serious curiosity). I can not count how many of Terracotta military people who served during the reign of the first Emperor of China, Qin Shi Huang in total.. I can not imagine that Emperor had built his mausoleum ,had he not? 🆗️, by the way, I cordially thank you for your wonderful project and Christmas to you!!

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  5. just incredible how you bring this to life. I love the combination of the heads and your use of interesting background information. You are a true master at this!

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  6. I had the great opportunity to visit this site in Xi'an in 2011. It was an amazing experience. I was also fortunate to meet the old farmer who was digging the well and discovered this treasure. According to our guide he is well cared for by the Chinese government.

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  7. As much as the emperor great skill himself, i would not like him to life today. His death also bring other people death. Imagine many skilled warrior, artist and architect dead because "following" him.

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