Seven people died when Ming Shenzong’s coffin was banned? Is this really the case? Sounds scary. It seems like this coffin was cursed during the official Year of the Rooster special carnival. This taboo is really becoming more and more terrifying. As times change, more and more taboos are circulating on the market, and they seem to be becoming more and more untouchable.
Ming Shenzong was the thirteenth emperor of the Ming Dynasty. Ming Shenzong was the longest reigning emperor in the Ming Dynasty. In 1959, the nanmu coffins of Ming Shenzong and the two queens were thrown into a ravine outside Baocheng, Mainland China. Although the surface of the coffin is exposed, it is in good overall condition. The farmer discovered it in the afternoon and immediately snatched it away. An elderly couple hired someone to make a coffin out of this precious nanmu for their funeral needs.
After the first coffin was finished, his wife was kicked to death. As soon as the second coffin was finished, the old man died. Two people died in less than half a month. A month later, among the farmers picking up coffins, Zhang Bao collected the most.
When the coffin was thrown into Baocheng, Zhang and his wife were working on the hillside outside the mausoleum wall. He realized that the coffin was a rare and good piece of wood, so he acted immediately and together with his wife dragged the wide and thick golden nan board to the front of the house. Zhang found someone to make two bedroom cabinets and placed them neatly in the main room. The people in the village warned: "The emperor's things cannot be used casually. If he does not have blessings, he will not be able to bear it and may even die."
Zhang Bao did not take these words to heart. Soon. , the tragedy really happened. One Sunday at noon, Zhang Bao and his wife came home from work covered in mud and suddenly found that their four children were missing. The couple searched around the house but could not find them.
In Ming Shenzong, Zhang Bao suddenly found four pairs of shoes next to a bedroom cabinet made of nanmu coffin. The two immediately opened the cabinet cover and saw four children squeezing each other and dying of anger. The children's fingers were bleeding, and the cabinet walls were covered with scratches.
After a detailed analysis of the causes of death, the local police concluded that four children died of asphyxiation. After the death of the child, the couple gave birth to four more children in just a few years. What is puzzling is that his only son died mysteriously on a cabinet in the middle of the night just after graduating from high school.
The underground palace is the place where the emperor's coffins are placed. It is the core of the mausoleum and the most mysterious place. Exit. After everyone evacuated, Lingfeng craftsmen used a unique 7-shaped tool to activate the "tapstone" behind the stone door to resist the underground palace's door and seal it permanently.
In order to prevent the future. When people rob tombs, the entrances to the underground mausoleums are usually made of bricks and stones, which are fake and cannot be marked. People who engage in this last craft often have no choice but to die in the early stage! To find the underground tombs, some craftsmen will secretly leave marks, that is, Guide stone.
You can find the emperor's mausoleum by following the guide stone, but there is a so-called diamond wall in front of the mausoleum. Behind the stone door of the diamond wall, there is a rectangular stone pillar that can be used as a door stick. , making it impossible to enter the tomb. Unless you use a 7-shaped tool, you can open the gate.
Archaeologists excavated the Dingling Tomb of Ming Shenzong Zhu Yijun, but it was not until September 2 of that year that they could open the gate. Found this guide stone with the legend, "This stone is sixteen feet deep and three feet in front of the diamond wall." There is an anecdote about the "guiding stone" that can be found in the dream of archaeologist Liu Jingyi. In one scene, the team members began to explore an inconspicuous secret place.
In less than an hour, the "guiding stone" secretly buried by the builders of the Ming Dynasty mausoleum was in an underground trench more than 20 meters deep. A corner was dug out. Archaeologists dug forward according to this guide
At that time, when the archaeologists opened the coffin, they surprised everyone and only Ming Shenzong's body was left rotting. The skeleton, with its head tilted up and its bones on a brocade quilt, was analyzed to cover the body from both sides.