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| The only terra cotta warrior not smashed by the peasants, in a glass case in the museum. |
A charioteer. The chariots, made of wood, have long since rotted away, but the charioteer and his horses survived (in pieces) and have been reconstructed. |
A standing archer. |
Rank upon rank of terra cotta soldiers. |
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| More ranks of the terra cotta soldiers. (Do take a closer look; the thumbnail doesn't do it justice.) |
The terra cotta warriors, smashed to bits as they were left by the rebel army. |
The pits from which the terra cotta soldiers were excavated. |
A photo of the reconstruction in progress. I'd say this was the world's largest jigsaw puzzle if I hadn't seen the ruins at Angkor Wat...! |
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| The travelingtiger on the city wall of Xi'an. (Photo courtesy Mike Magin.) |
Mike at a gate on the Xi'an city wall. |
Even the trash cans were beautiful! |
Yes, they really are everywhere. (Take a closer look if you can't figure out what I'm talking about.) |
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| The travelingtiger at Hua Shan |
Hua Shan, "Flower Mountain". |
Lots of rocky outcroppings with trees clinging to cracks in the wall... |
A porter carrying loads up the steps at Hua Shan (still the only way to get stuff up the steps!) |
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| I was puzzled by the sellers of engraved locks until I asked our tour guide. It turns out that the lock is a symbol of love, so a couple climbs up the mountain as far as they feel inspired, then lock the lock onto the chain so the sun and moon can witness their love for each other. Neat! |
A tree growing out of cracks in the rock on Hua Shan. It's hard to catch the scale of such things in a photo...it looked like a Chinese brush painting (not too surprising, I suppose!) |
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| As one of an endless group of purchasing opportunities, we went to a lacquer factory, where they explained how lacquer is made. They had some gorgeous wares, which I unfortunately had no place to put and not enough money to buy...but when I get that grand House on a Hill, I know where I'm going first! |
A lacquer cabinet with carved jade adornments. |
More of the (hand-carved!) jade. |
They also had woodcarvers there, for reasons mostly opaque to me. Here, a man carves a tree design. |
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| A carved phoenix. |
They had an embroidered tiger there as well!
(The travelingtiger stopped to say hello, of course.) |
And, I really wanted this beautiful little jade carving (the photo simply doesn't do it justice), so my mom bought it for me. (Thanks mom!) |
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| We visited a famous dumpling restaurant, and I took a bunch of photos. Here are some duck dumplings. |
More dumplings |
Mice! |
Pigs! |
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| Shrimp! |
And, the table at the start of the meal (before the dumplings started arriving). |
They had these weird candles at the restaurant, composed mostly of drippings.. I asked and was told that they are lucky candles...you light a taper every day the restaurant is open, and place the new taper on top of the old candle every morning. Over time, the drippings accumulate, so it gives a gauge of the longevity of the restaurant as well. |
And, because I couldn't resist it, this is (believe it or not) a watermelon. Carving courtesy of the Hotel Sofitel. I was damn impressed - I took it for a lamp until I got close up. |