China’s six-ton monument to the Emperor fell on my face

China’s six-ton monument to the Emperor fell on my face

Six-ton statue of the founder of the Chinese Qin dynasty in the Chinese city of Binzhou fell from the pedestal. As a result, the person of the Emperor was “flattened into a pancake”.

Six-ton statue of the founder of the Chinese Qin dynasty in the Chinese city of Binzhou fell from the pedestal due to a strong gust of wind.

19-foot figure of the Emperor Qin Shi Huangdi, established in 2005 in the city of Bingo, fell on my face, with the result that it was “flattened into a pancake,” according to the government newspaper Global Times.

The statue quickly raised by crane and taken away.

“This from the people just will not hide,’ said one of the workers lifted the statue in an interview with Global Times. Today everyone has a cell phone, how to hide?”.

As can be seen, the statue was hollow inside and held on a metal frame.

The founder of the dynasty of Qin Shi Huangdi had United China under his rule in 221-206 BC, having won all the major Chinese province.

When it was built the first fragments of the great wall of China, and after his death along with the Emperor had been buried at least 8100 terracotta statues of Chinese warriors and horses in natural size, the famous “terracotta army”.

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