A tombstone was unearthed in Jiangsu province, which read "There are no treasures inside". The expert was overjoyed: dig down quickly, why?

In ancient times, people attached great importance to death, even when they were dying, they wanted to take their wealth to the grave and continue to enjoy it after death. Therefore, it has become a new way for grave robbers to get rich. In order to guard against theft, Qin Shihuang poured a lot of mercury in his main tomb and set up a captain to touch gold. After Cao Cao's death, he would naturally guard against grave robbery, so there were 72 suspected tombs. The tomb of the Western Han Dynasty introduced today found that there was no treasure engraved in the tombstone, which made experts laugh and cry.

There are workers at the foot of Guishan Mountain in Gulou District, Xuzhou City, Jiangsu Province. On this day, they found that some stones looked very old, so they immediately reported to the relevant departments. The archaeological team quickly went to investigate and initially determined that this was a Western Han tomb. The tomb is 83 meters long from east to west and 33 meters wide from north to south, with a total area of more than 700 square meters. Kameyama Mountain was almost completely hollowed out. The tomb has a bedroom, a living room, a stable and a kitchen. It is completely an underground palace. The expert cleaned the silver print of a turtle button in the tomb. The square turtle on the printing table held its head high and its limbs stood upright. The rear nail is engraved with decorative patterns. Exquisitely carved, the edge of the stamp pad is slightly incomplete, but it is relatively well preserved. The word Liu Zhu is also engraved on the seal. Liu Zhu, imperial clan of Han Dynasty, King of Chu of Western Han Dynasty. His great-grandfather, Chu Yuan Liu Wang Jiao, was the younger brother of Emperor Gaozu Liu Bang. According to records, Guishan is the location of Liu Zhu's cemetery.

However, there is a stone tablet in the tomb that makes experts laugh and cry. The content above is that Wang Tong, the ancient corpse of Chu, buried the coffin in the sky, so that the princes had buried jade. Later, Dr. Wise Man was lucky enough to see this bibliography, which also made the benevolent sad. It probably means that he can swear to heaven that although he is the king of Chu, there is absolutely no precious funerary object in the tomb, only a coffin, so don't go to great trouble to dig it. It turns out that this is a letter to a crying grave robber. After thorough cleaning, the experts didn't find any valuable cultural relics. When Liu Zhu was buried, he was robbed by grave robbers. As for the tortoise seal that proves the identity of the tomb owner, experts speculate that it may be because it is small in size and has not been found. It's no use crying with grave robbers.