Who is the historical prototype of Wang Zanghai in Tomb Raider Notes?
Wang Zanghai, a character in Tomb Raider Notes. Based on the geomantic omen in Ming and Qing Dynasties, the novel is summarized as the architects and geomantic omen of Amin Dynasty who participated in the design and construction of Ming Zuling and other buildings. Ming Dynasty geographers and surveyors designed and built Ming Dynasty urban buildings such as the Forbidden City and Qujing City.
Wuzhong, with the word Sizheng, was born in 1373 and died in 1442. In the Ming Dynasty, ministers of the Ministry of Industry, ministers of the Ministry of Punishment and ministers of the Ministry of War were Yongle, Hongxi, Xuande and Orthodox. He built most of the Forbidden City and the Three Mausoleums (Changling, Xianling and Jingling) in Beijing, and made brilliant contributions to the architectural history of China.
Wuzhong is a native of Wucheng, which is recorded in Ming History and Jiajing Wucheng County Records. There are also detailed records in the Preface to the Initial Revision of Wu Genealogy preserved by the Wu family in Dawuzhuang, Luquantun Town. Wuzhong is the stepson of Wu Hezhong, while Wu Hezhong has been childless for many years. At the age of 42, he adopted the second son of a distant relative and changed his name to Wuzhong.
Wang Zanghai's experience:
According to Notes on Tomb Robbery, Wang Zanghai was appointed to directly participate in the design of the whole Ming Palace. It was after the Ming Dynasty moved its capital that the Ming Palace was designed.
In the early Ming Dynasty, Yingtianfu (now Nanjing) was the capital, and in the 19th year of Yongle (142 1), Ming Taizu Judy moved the capital to Shuntianfu (now Beijing), and Yingtianfu was renamed Nanjing. Wang Zanghai presided over the design of the Ming Palace Museum in Beijing, which was the same age as the Ming Emperor Judy. At that time, the emperor who pursued immortality was the Ming emperor Judy.
The Forbidden City in Beijing was built in the fifth year of Yongle (1407) and from the fifteenth year of Yongle to the eighteenth year of Yongle (14 17- 1420). The whole construction project was built by the Marquis of Chen Gui, with Wu Zhong as the planner. From the fifth year of Yongle in the Ming Dynasty (1407), Emperor Taizong of the Ming Dynasty gathered craftsmen from all over the country to recruit 200,000 to 300,000 migrant workers and military workers. 14 years later, this magnificent palace was built and became one of the famous buildings in the history of China.