China Naming Network - Almanac query - Why didn't the Japanese dig up the mausoleum of Qin Shihuang?

Why didn't the Japanese dig up the mausoleum of Qin Shihuang?

In addition to the custom of thin burial in Wei and Jin Dynasties, the imperial tombs in China also have obvious thick burial under tree seals, which naturally makes grave robbers salivate. Secondly, whenever dynasties change, grave robbery is rampant during the great turmoil, such as tombs in the late Han Dynasty, the late Tang Dynasty, the Republic of China, the Han Dynasty, the Song Dynasty, the Tang Dynasty and the Qing Dynasty. Even a grave robbery usually has an official background. For example, during the Three Kingdoms period, both Cao Cao and Sun Quan used grave robbery as the source of war. This "ten rooms and nine empty rooms" is not difficult to explain, and then look at the situation in Japan.

Indeed, after the full-scale outbreak of War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression, the Japanese army gradually occupied half of China by virtue of its superiority in armament and manpower. As we all know, the Japanese army is very greedy. They plundered China's resources and even carried out a very cruel "three-light policy" on the base areas, taking away a lot of wealth. Many people will have questions: The Japanese army is so greedy for money, why not steal the imperial tombs in the occupied areas? In fact, it's not that the Japanese don't want to dig, but there are many reasons for not doing it.

China's ancestors, of course. Located in Yan 'an City, Shaanxi Province, it is known as the first mausoleum in the world. Its pattern is completely consistent with the Long Mai trend of Kunlun Mountain. His mausoleum is the easiest to find, and there are no protective measures, but no one dares to steal it. The biggest reason is that on Long Mai, no one dares to move.

Indeed, the Japanese have no tradition of robbing tombs. For example, during the War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression period, the tombs in Beijing and Nanjing were not robbed. Most importantly, even archaeological excavations are not allowed in the main hall of the Japanese Imperial Palace. In fact, they have ghosts in their hearts. Everyone knows that the Japanese royal family is married by close relatives. If the genetic defects of the emperor in the mausoleum are made public, it will be unfavorable to the emperor who has been mythologized for thousands of years. And the ancestors of the Japanese emperor are also myths. What a terrible thing it would be if his tomb was excavated and it was suddenly discovered that the emperor's family was from China?

In a word, is it really noble for the Japanese not to dig the tombs of these emperors? Look at the villages that implemented the "Three Lights" policy, look at the comfort women, and look at the people who died in the Nanjing Massacre. So the fact that the Japanese don't steal the imperial tomb can't hide the fact that they are animals.