Greek Sculpture Inspired Terracotta Warriors

News December 10, 2013

(Flickr user: travelourplanet.com)
SHARE:
terracotta-warriors-greek-art
(Flickr user: travelourplanet.com)

 

LONDON, ENGLAND—A professor of East Asian archaeology at University of London asserts that Greek art was the inspiration for the 8,000 terracotta warriors that guard the mausoleum of China's first emperor, Qin Shi Huangdi. According to Lukas Nickel, recently translated ancient texts indicate early contact between China and Greece, telling of the first emperor copying 12 huge statues that appeared in western China more than 2,200 years ago. Because large statues were not present in China before this time, Nickel infers that the idea to construct the sculptures was influenced by the conquest of Alexander the Great.

  • Features November/December 2013

    Life on the Inside

    Open for only six weeks toward the end of the Civil War, Camp Lawton preserves a record of wartime prison life

    Read Article
    (Virginia Historical Society, Mss5.1.Sn237.1v.6p.139)
  • Features November/December 2013

    Vengeance on the Vikings

    Mass burials in England attest to a turbulent time, and perhaps a notorious medieval massacre

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Thames Valley Archaeological Services)
  • Letter from Bangladesh November/December 2013

    A Family's Passion

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Reema Islam)
  • Artifacts November/December 2013

    Moche Ceremonial Shield

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Lisa Trever, University of California, Berkeley)