The Qin Terracotta Warriors and Horses that have been excavated are arranged neatly and all face the east. Is it related to Feng Shui?
As a Chinese, everyone knows the Terracotta Warriors and Horses. More than 2,000 years ago, when Qin Shihuang built his own mausoleum, in order to demonstrate his great achievements and powerful imperial power during his lifetime, he cast a large number of pottery figurines in the shape of every general and soldier in the empire to bury him. Today's massive Terracotta Warriors and Horses of Qin Shihuang's Mausoleum, which is now Lishan, Shaanxi. The Qin Terracotta Warriors and Horses all face the east because Qin was the westernmost vassal state in China during the Warring States Period. Qin continued to destroy the six kingdoms. He led his troops eastward and gradually eliminated the six eastern kingdoms and unified the world.
Then why do the Terracotta Warriors and Horses all face the east? Is it because the sun is facing east and they all faced the sun and waited for Qin Shihuang's order? ?
We all know that the Qin Dynasty’s kingdoms were all in Xianyang, in the west, while the six kingdoms at that time were all in the east. Qin Shihuang’s terracotta warriors and horses face east, which should be a reflection of Qin Shihuang’s desire to conquer the Central Plains and unify the country. Although he unified the whole country, he hoped that his terracotta warriors and horses could protect his territory forever and be passed down to the ages.
The Terracotta Warriors and Horses of the First Emperor of Qin are the underground military formations of the Mausoleum of the First Emperor of Qin. This symbolizes the majesty and majesty of the First Emperor of Qin who looked down upon the east and unified the six kingdoms. Under the rule of the First Emperor of Qin, the Qin Dynasty’s illustrious military might and the Qin Dynasty’s powerful national power. The terracotta warriors and horses facing the east symbolize Qin Shihuang's great achievements in destroying the six countries and unifying the world. It also symbolizes that Qin Shihuang is ready to suppress the rebellion of the remaining forces of the six countries in order to consolidate the unity and ensure the eternal rule of the Qin Dynasty, so that they will not dare to rebel and undermine the unity p>
There is another saying that Qin Shihuang once went to the East China Sea to seek immortality and pray for immortality. The terracotta warriors and horses faced east perhaps because Qin Shihuang wanted them to continue to follow him. Some people also believe that the main reason why the pit of Qin Terracotta Warriors and Horses faces the east is that the main entrance of Qin Shihuang's mausoleum is in the east.
Another theory is that in the last years of the Qin Dynasty, social conflicts were acute. After the death of Qin Shihuang, the peasant war broke out in the late Qin Dynasty and the world was in chaos. The Qin Dynasty was no longer able to continue to build unfinished underground military formations, so the Qin Dynasty emerged. This situation. But it's just a possible speculation.