The 13 Tombs of the Ming Emperors are the tombs of the 13 emperors who moved the capital to Beijing during the Ming Dynasty. When Zhu Yuanzhang, the emperor of the Ming Dynasty, was in power, the capital of the Ming Dynasty was in Nanjing. After his death, he was buried in the Xiaoling Tomb of the Ming Dynasty in Nanjing, so the Ming Emperors 13 There is no Ming Taizu Zhu Yuanzhang in the mausoleum. It is the first of the three major mausoleums of the Zhu royal family in the Ming Dynasty of China (Xiaoling Tombs in Nanjing, Ming Tombs in Beijing and Fengyang Imperial Tombs). It is located in Taiping Township, 8 kilometers southwest of Fengyang, Anhui Province. The graves of Zhu Yuanzhang's parents, three brothers, three sisters-in-law and two nephews. It was built in the second year of Hongwu (1369) in the Ming Dynasty and completed in the eleventh year of Hongwu. There are three roads: imperial city, brick city and earth city. The imperial city has a circumference of 275 meters and a height of 7 meters. It contains the main hall, golden gate, left and right verandas, stele pavilions, imperial bridges, Chinese tables and 36 pairs of stone figures and beasts. The brick city has a circumference of 3.5 kilometers and a height of 7 meters. Furniture hall, kitchen, official hall, Lingxing gate, red bridge, divine kitchen, divine treasury, etc. The circumference of Tucheng is 14 kilometers, and there are buildings such as Shenlu, official hall, shophouse, water pass, Huangtang Bridge and so on. In the stele pavilions on the left and right sides of the imperial city, there are the "Imperial Mausoleum Stele" and the "Wordless Stele" written by Zhu Yuanzhang, the founder of the Ming Dynasty, describing his life experience and experiences. This stele is an important material for studying the history of Zhu Yuanzhang. The palace buildings of the Ming Emperor's Mausoleum were destroyed by war in the late Ming Dynasty. There are still tombs today. In front of the tomb are inscriptions, Chinese watches, "Emperor's Mausoleum Stele" and 34 pairs of stone figures and beasts. The stone carvings of the Fengyang Imperial Mausoleum are the largest and best-preserved treasures among the royal mausoleum stone carvings of the Ming Dynasty.