Notes on Grave Robbery Kowloon corpse coffin really exists, and it is the coffin of the slave king of the Kingdom of Eastern Xia.

There is a story about Wang Jiulong, a slave of Dongxia State, carrying coffins in Tomb Robbery Notes. Many people think it's absurd, but it's just a novel after all, and it certainly doesn't exist in history. After all, I have never heard of any emperor who used dragon coffins in ancient times. But at this point, there really exists in history, not only the slave king of Dongxia, but also the corpse coffin of Kowloon, only slightly different.

First, the coffin of Kowloon, the slave king of the Eastern Xia Dynasty.

It is mentioned in the novel "Notes on Grave Robbery" that the Kowloon corpse coffin of the slave king in the Eastern Han Dynasty was real in history, but it was slightly different from the real coffin. Although there are nine dragons carved on the coffin of the Queen of Eastern Xia in Kowloon, they are actually not real dragons, but new dragons created by ethnic minorities. These nine dragons? Dragon? Surrounded by the coffin of the slave king, it is called the Kowloon Corpse Coffin.

The corpse coffin carried by King Wannu of Kowloon, the dragon body is actually a snake body, and the dragon foot is still a hundred feet of a centipede. It looks so funny that it can't compare with loong at all. There are poisonous insects around the coffin in Kowloon to protect the coffin. The shape of the coffin in Kowloon is also different from the general one. It is a regular octagon with a dragon at each corner. Finally, a dragon surrounds eight dragons and plays a fixed role.

In fact, in the official history, there is no description of carrying coffins in Kowloon, and even unofficial history did not mention it. However, according to ancient records, there was indeed a slave king in Eastern Xia in history, and it was the existence of the Jurchen regime. It rose during the decline of the Jin Dynasty and existed for more than ten years. He used to be the leader of Liaodong, first known as Dazhen, then changed to Eastern Xia, and Korean historical records called Dongzhen. Previous 0 /2 Next Page