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| In near perfect condition with teeth and skin intact, the gaping mouthed mummy also sports the then hairstyle of the day as well as a haunting expression [Credit: Daily Mail] |
In near perfect condition with teeth and skin intact, the gaping mouthed mummy also sports the then hairstyle of the day – the queue, a unique cut imposed on the majority Han Chinese ethnic group during the Qing Dynasty.
As seen in these grisly photos, the mummy had, up to the time of his death, his head close-shaved every ten days but wore the crown and back long, weaving the signature braided feet-long ponytail.
The hairstyle was compulsory for all males. Those who disobeyed the ruling Qing’s orders at the barbers were accused of disloyalty - and executed for treason.
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| A mummified body is seen at a graveyard after a Qing Dynasty Official's Tomb was robbed [Credit: Daily Mail] |
But they still face severe punishment as the government and police attempt to clamp down on the lucrative illegal tomb raiding industry.
Not that the punitive threats seem to deter thousands of ghoulish thieves who use increasingly sophisticated methods to carry out their reckless plundering.
Many deploy bulldozers and dynamite to access thousands of sensitive tombs often located deep underground and in remote locations.
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| The mummy had his head close-shaved every ten days but wore the crown and back long, weaving the signature braided feet-long ponytail [Credit: Daily Mail] |
Experts believe nine in every 10 tombs in China has been raided, denying the country of its illustrious and unique heritage.
Many of the graves survived the ransacking deeds of the Red Guards who vandalised countless cultural works during Chairman Mao’s Cultural Revolution.
But grave robbing has become a way for many to get rich quick ever since China embarked on economic reform in the 1980s.
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| Workers at the graveyard after the tomb was raided. Grave robbing has become a way for many to get rich quick [Credit: Daily Mail] |
The mummy’s family burial chamber, located in Ningde, Fujian Province, dates back to 1882 and was a four-roomed Phoenix Tomb – all of which was raided.
The grave site was previously robbed in the 1950s but the thieves offered a semblance of respect to the dead and left the mummies and the structures intact.
But the 21st tomb raiders, once over the scare of their horror find, searched and destroyed what they did not rob.
Author: Emily Allen | Source: Daily Mail [March 21, 2012]









