Located on Dongfeng Road, near to the Nianjia
Lake (Nianjia hu), the Hunan Provincial Museum (Hunan bowuguan),
is one of China's better museums. The complex has three main
buildings, one
of which covers revolutionary history and two that are devoted
to the Western Han (206 BC-24 AD) tombs that were discovered
at Mawangdui, 4km northeast of Changsha. The tomb exhibits
are predictably better than the revolutionary one.
The tombs, discovered in 1972 and containing
over 3,000 antiques, were the burial ground for the Marquis
of Dai, Li Cang, and his family. Li Cang was Prime Minister
to the King of Changsha between 193 and 186 BC. The bodies,
considering their age, remain in very good condition, especially
the Marquis's wife, Xin Zui, who died in 186 BC. The reason
for her preservation was the body, that was wrapped in over
20 layers of silk and linen, a triple layered wooden sarcophagus,
that was sealed with charcoal and white peat, and a tomb,
that was lined with clay and charcoal. The Marquess can now
be viewed in the basement, partially unwrapped and preserved
in a liquid-filled Perspex tank. Her organs are in separate
jars, and from laboratory tests, scientists were able to establish
that the Marquess suffered from a variety of illnesses, from
tuberculosis and the bilharzia worm to arthritis.
A variety of silk garments & fabrics, lacquered
bowls, musical instruments, wooden tomb guardians, funerary
offerings and the enormous outer timber caskets of the sarcophaguses
are displayed in the basement of the other building. Of special
interest include the silk banners that display the Han beliefs
on the underworld, earth and the heavens. On the second floor
of the smaller building, just outside, auspicious symbols
of long life are exhibited, including some live reptiles.
How to get hunan provincial museum : Take bus
No.113.
Opening hour: Daily; 08.30-12:00, 14:00-:00.
Cost: RMB30 entrance fee. |