Where is the lotus treasure in Feng Shui buried?
Where was Liu Bei buried when he died? In 223 AD, Liu Bei's Baidicheng was orphaned by Zhuge Liang and died in Fengjie, Chongqing. No one knows where Liu Bei was buried, which is recorded in the official history:
On June 10, AD 223, Liu Bei died of illness in Fengjie, Chongqing. In May, Zi Gong returned to Chengdu, and in August, Hui Ling was buried.
Then, it was speculated that Liu Bei recorded in the official history was buried in Huiling, and this Hui Ling was located on the west side of the main hall of Wuhou Temple in the southern suburbs of Chengdu, but the problem came. Hui Ling has never been excavated, so no one knows whether Liu Bei's tomb is really buried in Hui Ling, so there are two other versions.
I. Sichuan Pengshan Lianhua Dam
Liu Bei died in Bai Di (now Fengjie), and Liu Bei's lair was in Chengdu. In ancient times, it was a long way from Fengjie to Chengdu, and the road was rugged. It took three months from Fengjie to Chengdu, and Liu Bei died in summer in the scorching sun. The body was destined to rot for three months, so some people thought that when Liu Bei was transported to Sichuan, the body began to rot and was not suitable for further transportation, so it was found in Sichuan.
Second, Fengjie
Others believe that Liu Bei was buried directly where Liu Bei died. Due to the scorching sun when Liu Bei died and the long journey to his hometown, Liu Bei's cronies decided to bury Liu Bei directly nearby, and chose a feng shui treasure house for Liu Bei in Fengjie, but they didn't know where it was.
The exact location of Liu Bei's Tomb is still a mystery, which is the fundamental reason why Liu Bei's Tomb will remain immortal for thousands of years.
What organs are there in Liu Bei's Tomb?
Up to now, no one knows where Liu Bei's grave is, and naturally no one has been in it, so I don't know what's inside. However, according to the level of science and technology at that time and the Daoism that Zhuge Liang was good at, there was bound to be a means of protection in Liu Bei's Tomb, that is, "stabbing a knife in the back" and "hanging a sword over his head", which was recorded in mausoleum of the first qin emperor. By the end of the Han Dynasty, Zhuge Liang could improve it and carry it forward.
In fact, whether there are organs in the tomb is not that important. What matters is whether the tomb is well hidden or not and whether it is known by others. If the tomb is known by others, no matter how powerful the organs in the tomb are, it will be broken by others sooner or later, otherwise no imperial tomb will be stolen in history. Zhuge Liang did this very well. No one knows the exact location of either Liu Bei's tomb or Zhuge Liang's own tomb, so naturally it was not stolen.