BEIJING – Chinese archaeologists have found what could be the tomb of Cao Cao, a skillful general and ruler in the 3rd century who was later depicted in popular folklore as the archetypal cunning politician. Archaeological officials say Cao's 8,000-square feet (740-square meter) tomb complex, with a 130-feet (40-meter) passage leading to an underground chamber, was found in Xigaoxue, a village near the ancient capital of Anyang in central Henan province, according to the official China Daily newspaper. Historians say Cao Cao's outstanding military and political talents enabled him to build the strongest and most prosperous state in northern China during the Three Kingdoms period in 208 to 280 A.D., when China had three separate rulers. Characters based on Cao are depicted as shrewd and unscrupulous villains in traditional Chinese operas and in one of China's best-loved historical novels, "Romance of The Three Kingdoms." In the fictionalized account, Cao says, "Better for me to wrong the world than for the world to wrong me." The common saying in Chinese "speak of Cao Cao and Cao Cao arrives" is the equivalent of the English expression "speak of the devil." Cao was also a prolific poet. From the tomb complex, the bones of three people and more than 250 relics have been unearthed in nearly one year of excavation work, Chinese archaeological officials were quoted as saying. The bones were identified as the remains of a man aged about 60 and two women, one in her 50s and the other between 20 and 25 years. Experts say the male was Cao, who died at age 65 in 220 A.D., the elder woman his empress, and the younger woman her servant. The report said among the relics found were stone paintings featuring the social life of Cao's time, stone tablets bearing inscriptions of sacrificial objects, and Cao's personal belongings. Tablets carrying the inscription "King Wu of Wei," Cao's posthumous title, were seized from people who had apparently stolen them from the tomb, the report said. "The stone tablets bearing inscriptions of Cao's posthumous reference are the strongest evidence," archaeologist Liu Qingzhu, of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, was quoted as saying. "No one would or could have so many relics inscribed with Cao's posthumous reference in the tomb unless it was Cao's." Source: Associated Press (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/as_china_general_s_tomb)
Yep, it looks like they found him. The person who said I'd rather betray the world than let the world betray me. Cao Cao
This would be an amazing find...the stories and stuff about Cao Cao is legendary. I'm very interested in what they found down there.
i thought that's already found... but they just can't get through coz it's protected by a thick layer of mercury plus our current technology might not be advanced enough to prevent oxidation to everything that's inside...
have they? all i know is that they found traces of liquid mercury by testing the soil near the terracotta army, however I need a dead body to confirm that its qin shi huang's tomb LOL. anyways, i have read from other sources that tomb raiders had already found tsao tsao tomb way before those archaeologists and had taken away many relics... but lets hope they can examine the skull and confirm that its the true "Wei Wang" -lol here are some pics of tsao tsao's tomb http://medievalnews.blogspot.com/2009/12/tomb-of-cao-cao-famous-chinese-ruler.html
yeah well the dude's been laying there for over 1000 yrs and he said he only wanted a simple tomb so someone's bound to get in there during that loooooooonnnnnngggggggg period of time as for Qing Wang's body well u'll need to wait till the archeologists to find a way to get in... the Terracotta Army have lost their colours already... they need to find a better way to prevent the relics from deteriorating...
haha. patience is a virtue i guess... yea, they have to find a better way to preserve the terracotta army from deteriorating due to the exposure of oxygen, hopefully they'll find a way so that future generation can still see them.