Hosted on MSN1mon
Was Alexander the Great eaten by sharks? Inside the wild theories for what happened to the iconic ruler's body.Alexandria's great mausoleum, according to the book "Alexander's Tomb: The Two Thousand Year Obsession to Find the Lost Conqueror" (Basic Books, 2006). Related: 2nd-century Alexander the Great ...
Hosted on MSN9mon
Mysteries and misfortune surround Wichita Falls mausoleumThe mausoleum was constructed 100 years ago by Annie’s second great-grandmother, Lillis Morgan. Her life was a story worth its own telling. Lillis Davis was born in Illinois and came to the ...
In 196I, the State Council decided the Mausoleum of Emperor Qinshihuang would be a key cultural relic under state protection. Emperor Qinshihuang was named Ying Zheng and was a great politician ...
but the most believable is Yu Mausoleum in Shaoxing. According to "Xia's Origin" in the Records of the Historian, "Some people said that Yu the Great had held counsel with all princes in the south ...
The mausoleum in suburban Anyang, Henan province, seemed not to match the fame of its occupant, the late Eastern Han Dynasty (25-220) warlord and poet Cao Cao.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results