News

From day 1 of US-China trade talks to Chinese state media pouncing on chaos in Los Angeles, here’s a round-up from today’s coverage.
A 30-year-old Chinese tourist damaged two ancient clay warriors from China’s terracotta army, local officials said on Saturday, according to Agence France Presse. According to the statement, the ...
A 30-year-old Chinese tourist damaged two ancient clay warriors from China’s terracotta army, local officials said on Saturday, according to Agence France Presse. According to the statement, the ...
Bowers Museum’s chief curator, Tianlong Jiao, is joined by Li Gang, director of Emperor Qin Shi Huang’s Mausoleum Museum on tour at Bowers Museum.
Five of the Terracotta Warriors are on loan to the Bowers, where they will be displayed to the public starting Saturday, May 24, and through Oct. 19.
This immersive experience spans 1,500 years of Chinese history, tracing the cultural and political developments that led to Emperor Qin Shi Huang’s rise and the unification of dynastic China.
The combination of Qin Shi Huang's captivating persona and powerful fighting methods establishes him as a standout figure amid the diverse characters of Record of Ragnarok. For anime fans who ...
A netizen in Liaocheng, East China's Shandong Province, posted a fabricated video online claiming that the local hospital had successfully revived Qin Shi Huang, the first emperor of the Qin ...
Qin Shi Huang’s mausoleum—which experts believe took 38 years and 700,000 workers to build—also includes a range of non-warrior artifacts. But the army of figures remain one of the most ...
Roughly 2,000 clay warriors have been unearthed from Qin Shi Huang’s tomb since the site was discovered in 1974, but only ten of these have been statues of military leaders.
Qin Shi Huang’s Terracotta Army is thought to have been erected between 247 and 208 B.C.E., more than 2,200 years in the past.