Why should a person who is a queen be buried in the wilderness before her death and claim that the emperor will guard her tomb five hundred years from now?
This queen is Kublai Khan’s Queen Chabi, and she is Kublai Khan’s virtuous wife. This is what she said in her last words. Historical records record that Queen Chabi often gave Kublai Khan useful advice when she was around him. Before Kublai Khan succeeded to the throne of the Great Khan, Queen Chabi had already married Kublai Khan. Among Kublai Khan’s many wives and concubines The favorite of Kublai Khan, the founder of the Zhongyuan Dynasty, was Queen Chabi.
According to historical records, Queen Chabi was very diligent and thrifty, and Queen Chabi was very kind to the captured Queen Mother of the Southern Song Dynasty and the female family members. But unfortunately, Queen Chabi passed away in the second year after the Yuan Dynasty unified China. Queen Chabi's last words to Kublai Khan were to bury herself in a barren mountain. Kublai Khan was very puzzled. How could the mausoleum of a majestic queen be built in a barren mountain?
Queen Chabi told Kublai Khan that in 500 years there would be an emperor guarding her tomb. Kublai Khan finally agreed to Queen Chabi's last words. However, Kublai Khan was still very thoughtful. He covered up the tomb of Queen Chabi so that future generations of tomb robbers would not visit it. 500 years later, it was already the Qianlong period of the Qing Dynasty, and the barren hill that originally belonged to the tomb of Queen Chabi was already in the Summer Palace.
At that time, Qianlong planned to build a tower. During the construction, the workers dug up a tombstone. Legend has it that the tombstone had eight characters written on it: "If you don't touch me, I won't touch you." In this case, Qianlong decided to build a pavilion to suppress the people below. ghost and named it Foxiang Pavilion. However, these are all derived from folklore and are not very reliable, because there is another saying that the tomb of a concubine of the Ming Dynasty is buried under the Foxiang Pavilion. Therefore, we cannot know whether there is a mausoleum under the Foxiang Pavilion now. You know, we can't guess who the tomb belongs to. The above are all inferences based on folklore.