Why did Dong Zhuo expose the body of Emperor Wu of Han Dynasty?

The mausoleum is that of Liu Che, the Emperor of the Han Dynasty. Liu Che/Kloc-acceded to the throne at the age of 0/6, and began to build his own mausoleum the following year. It is said that when Liu Che was hunting near Maoxiang, he found a unicorn-shaped movement and an immortal fruit tree. He thought it was a treasure trove of geomantic omen, so he wrote a letter to build a mausoleum here.

Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty is a very talented person. During his 54-year reign, he made great contributions to the war of conquering the south and the north, and at the same time, he continued to expand the mausoleum, taking out one-third of the national income every year as the cost of building the mausoleum and collecting funerary objects. The construction of Mao Mausoleum of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty did not stop until the collapse of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty in the second year of his accession to the throne, and it was built for 53 years. Its scale can be compared with the mausoleum of the First Qin Emperor in Lishan Mountain, and it is not just a ground building. According to "Hanshu Jiuyi", the underground palace occupies a tilt, reaching 13 feet deep. The tomb is 17 feet high and 2 feet long on each side. The four sides of the tomb are tombs that can be driven by six horses, and there are so many funerary objects in the tomb that there is no place to put things in the tomb.

This is because the reign of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty was long, and after his death, there was no place to put those rare treasures in the mausoleum. A surprising number of funerary objects also caused Maoling to suffer several grave robberies.

Four years after the death of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty, the funerary objects of Maoling were taken out for sale in the market. However, this time, the funerary objects should not be stolen. Probably when Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty was alive, there were too many treasures in the mausoleum, and some bold people stole a small part of them.

Mausoleum was first excavated on a large scale in the late Western Han Dynasty. At that time, the insurgents painted their eyebrows red, which was called "Red Eyebrow Army" in history. After the Red Eyebrow Army invaded Chang 'an, it ransacked Chang 'an and came to Xianyang to excavate the tomb of the Empress of the Han Dynasty. Maoling is also doomed.

According to historical records, after the Red Eyed Army dug the mausoleum, thousands of soldiers moved for dozens of days, but "the things in the mausoleum still cannot be halved". After being defeated by Liu Xiu, the Red Eyebrow Army visited Maoling again.

At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, there was a fool named Blade. The butcher was born as a general and invited Dong Zhuo, who was far away in Liangzhou, to come to Beijing to help him. When Dong Zhuo arrived, He Jin was first killed by He Jin, causing a series of unrest in Luoyang. Dong Zhuo took advantage of the fish in troubled waters, incorporated blades' troops, and bought off Ding Yuan's confidant Lu Bu, who killed Ding Yuan and annexed Ding Yuan's troops.

From then on, Dong Zhuo monopolized the power, abolished the little emperor, changed the emperor to Han Xian, and poisoned He Taihou. The Liangzhou soldiers he brought with him were a group of extremely cruel looters. When Dong Zhuo Group moved its capital to Chang 'an, it set fire to Luoyang. Predatory Dong Zhuo also ordered Lu Bu to rob the tombs of the Western Han Dynasty, and Maoling was robbed again.

Dong Zhuo asked Lu Bu to rob Maoling, and specially gave Abu the task to find the secret recipe in Maoling. Dong Zhuo has a granddaughter named.

Dong Bai

Dong Zhuo likes this granddaughter very much, but it's a pity that Dong Bai is dumb. Dong Zhuo once widely spread the world famous doctors to treat Dong Bai, but it was useless. Dong Zhuo was told that Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty had been looking for an alchemist all his life, and there might be a panacea or a magic prescription for treating dumb diseases in his mausoleum.