Historians found no traces of burning in Epang Palace. Did Epang Palace really exist?
Afang Palace is real, and it is also a tourist attraction located in Shaanxi Province. The total area is 150,000 square kilometers. It has been listed as a provincial cultural relic protection unit in Shaanxi Province.
It was built in the thirty-fifth year of Qin Shihuang. It was one of the four major projects during Qin Shihuang’s reign. Everyone knows that Qin Shihuang built the Great Wall and so on. Epang Palace is also magnificent and magnificent, and no amount of financial and material resources are spent on it. Its number. Also known as a wonder of the world. Countless people visit every year.
I have also been there once at the junction of Xi'an and Xianyang. The biggest impression is not that it looks good but that my legs hurt. The place is too big. It takes a long walk to see the panoramic view of Afang Palace.
In Du Mu's Fu of Afang Palace, it is written that Shushan Wu, A Fang came out, covering more than 300 miles, isolating the sky and the sun. According to current calculations, the area of Afang Palace is equivalent to ninety football fields. It also shows that Qin Shihuang was still very rich. He could build such a large palace and decorate it very gorgeously. He couldn't do it without any spare money. come out. Rich people have deep pockets.
Afang Palace has no traces of being burned by fire, nor has it been beaten by wind, frost, rain and snow over time, so there are no traces of burning. It was intact from top to bottom and untouched by fire. Qin Shihuang once invited many Feng Shui experts and chose a geomantic treasure land to build Afang Palace. This shows how much he attaches importance to this palace.
Everyone who has been to Xi'an knows about Epang Palace. It may be that Xiang Yu burned other palaces back then and was mistaken for Epang Palace. This is why later generations said that Epang Palace was burned by fire. Afang Palace really existed. It witnessed the rise and fall of the Qin Dynasty and is also known as the first palace in the world. Only then did Du Mu's various descriptions of Afang Palace come into being.