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Well-preserved ancient corpses were unearthed from the Lujiashan tomb in Jingzhou, Hubei, revealing the mystery of the incorrupt female corpse in the Qing Dynasty

As we all know, Jingzhou was called Jiangling and Yingdu in ancient times. It is a prefecture-level city in Hubei Province. It is located in the middle reaches of the Yangtze River and in the hinterland of the Jianghan Plain. Jingzhou is a famous national historical and cultural city. “Jingzhou came into existence when Yu planned Kyushu.” Jingzhou has a history of more than 3,000 years. Since 689 BC when Chu State established its capital, Jinan City, 6 dynasties and 34 emperors have established their capitals here. From Sun Shuao, “the first official in the world” to Zhang Juzheng, the first assistant of Wanli in the Ming Dynasty, there are as many as 138 prime ministers who have gone out from Jingzhou. Jingzhou is the birthplace of Chu culture and the famous ancient battlefield of the Three Kingdoms. In history, stories of the Three Kingdoms such as “Liu Bei borrowing Jingzhou” and “Guan Yu lost Jingzhou” all happened here. In addition to countless historical legends, there are also many ancient tombs buried here. . What I want to tell you today is that well-preserved ancient corpses were unearthed from the Lujiashan tomb in Jingzhou, Hubei, revealing the mystery of the incorrupt female corpse in the Qing Dynasty.

Well-preserved ancient corpses were unearthed from the Lujiashan tomb in Jingzhou, Hubei, revealing the mystery of the incorrupt female corpse in the Qing Dynasty

In 2009, an ancient corpse was accidentally dug up at the Lujiashan construction site in Jingzhou, Hubei. The person in charge who felt the situation was serious immediately reported it to the local cultural relics department. The Jingzhou Museum immediately dispatched archaeologists to the scene after receiving the news. After archaeological exploration, this tomb is a vertical pit tomb, a single-coffin tomb with low grades and specifications, and it is preliminarily judged that it is a small tomb in the late Ming and early Qing dynasties. The position of the coffin lid is very close to the surface of the earth. What is incredible is that there is a well-preserved female corpse in the tomb. Her demeanor is peaceful, and her skin, muscles and other tissues are still elastic. Then the female corpse was rushed to the laboratory. Archaeologists were surprised to find that it was not a wet corpse that should have appeared in the humid areas of Jiangnan, but a mummified corpse that only existed in the dry desert environment in the past. Why do mummies appear in Jingzhou, where the water network is dense and groundwater is rich? What kind of identity did this mysterious Qing Dynasty woman have before her death?

Well-preserved ancient corpses were unearthed from the Lujiashan tomb in Jingzhou, Hubei, revealing the mystery of the incorrupt female corpse in the Qing Dynasty

According to the shape and decoration of the ancient corpse quilts, archaeologists determined that the tombs belonged to the late Ming and early Qing dynasties. At that time, brick-room tombs had long been popularized, and only civilians who lived in distress would choose to be buried in earth pits. The female corpse in the coffin stood up straight, her eyes were closed, her mouth was slightly open, and her skin, muscles, and quilts were well preserved. Throughout the cleaning process of the wet corpse, the preservation of highly perishable cultural relics such as silk fabrics and lacquer wood utensils is inseparable from important conditions such as deep burial, sealing, and water saturation. On the contrary, the tomb of the female corpse in Lujiashan is just the opposite. The burial is not deep, the burial equipment is thin, and the coffin is relatively dry. What is the reason why this female corpse can be preserved to this day? The archaeological team responsible for cleaning up the filling of the tomb found that the gap between the coffin and the pit in the tomb was not filled with green plaster, but all of it was filled with lime. Lime can not only prevent moisture, but also repel insects. Could it be that the preservation of the female corpse is related to the filling of lime?

Well-preserved ancient corpses were unearthed from the Lujiashan tomb in Jingzhou, Hubei, revealing the mystery of the incorrupt female corpse in the Qing Dynasty

Well-preserved ancient corpses were unearthed from the Lujiashan tomb in Jingzhou, Hubei, revealing the mystery of the incorrupt female corpse in the Qing Dynasty