What is the only tomb of the Qing Dynasty that has not been excavated, which keeps grave robbers at a respectful distance?
Shunzhi, who advocates Buddhism, has always advocated that there is nothing valuable in his grave as a funerary object. To put it bluntly, Shunzhi's mausoleum is not worth digging, and even if it is turned upside down, nothing good can be found. Emperor Kangxi wrote a typescript of 15 on his tombstone to better protect the grave of his father the emperor shunzhi. Imperial examination is a legacy, mountains do not worship ornaments, do not hide treasures? Many grave robbers were dumbfounded at the sight of the words 15, so they might as well go back.
Another mausoleum in Shunzhi was not stolen, thanks to a folklore. It is said that the emperor shunzhi converted to Buddhism, went to Wutai Mountain and was finally buried in Wutai Mountain. So the Qing Xiaoling Mausoleum is just a cenotaph, which is empty. There is no treasure in nature, so it is impossible for grave robbers to patronize.
Just because the emperor shunzhi's mausoleum was not robbed doesn't mean that no one came to do such a thing. During the Republic of China, this tomb welcomed four groups of grave robbers. What I hate most is Sun Dianying's troops, which can't be dug and exploded with explosives. In the end, they had to leave in anger. In the past 300 years, the mausoleum of Emperor Shunzhi suffered two large-scale earthquakes, and the whole mausoleum remained motionless. I have to say that this is a treasure trove of geomantic omen. Since the Ming Dynasty, Judy has been optimistic about this treasure trove of geomantic omen, and then chose Changping, which is better than Zunhua in the north of Beijing. Later, Emperor Zhu Youjian wanted to be buried here, but later he gave up and became the location of the mausoleum of the Qing monarch today.