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Yongling (Tomb of Wang Jian) | |
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Location | 10 Yongling Road, Chengdu, Sichuan, China |
Coordinates | 30°40′34″N 104°02′41″E / 30.67611°N 104.04472°E |
Built | 918 |
Owner | Wang Jian |
The Yongling Mausoleum (Chinese: 永陵; pinyin: Yǒnglíng), commonly known as the tomb of Wang Jian (Chinese: 王建墓), is the burial place of Wang Jian (847–918), the founding emperor of Former Shu. It is located at 10 Yongling Road, Jinniu District, Chengdu, Sichuan, China.
In the Later Tang dynasty (923–937), Emperor Meng Zhixiang issued a decree to protect the tomb. However, the auxiliary buildings of the site decayed from the Northern Song dynasty (960-1127) on. Only the grave mound and the coffin chamber survive. It was excavated between 1940 and 1943 by the archaeologist Feng Hanji and others and confirmed as Wang Jian's tomb. A number of cultural relics were found, which were transferred to Sichuan Museum. It has twice been listed as a cultural relics protection site in Sichuan Province. In 2001 a tomb passage was rebuilt in the style of other Tang dynasty imperial mausoleums.