kNaru LogokNaru
⌘K
전체K-Pop & EntertainmentK-Drama & ShowsDaily Life & CultureGaming & EsportsViral & MemesNews & TrendingFood & Dining
Issue#Humor#K-pop#Humor#Meme#Viral#Korea#Gaming#Sports

Feeds

All FeedsIssuesK-Pop & EntertainmentK-Drama & ShowsDaily Life & CultureGaming & EsportsViral & MemesNews & TrendingFood & Dining

Feeds

All FeedsIssuesK-Pop & EntertainmentK-Drama & ShowsDaily Life & CultureGaming & EsportsViral & MemesNews & TrendingFood & Dining
⌘K
Home/Chinese Artifacts That Somehow Survived the Madness of the Cultural Revolution
ppomppu|General•Recently

Chinese Artifacts That Somehow Survived the Madness of the Cultural Revolution

61
0
0
Post image
AI Translated Image

What was the Cultural Revolution? Along with the Great Leap Forward (which claimed 50 million lives), it was one of Mao Zedong’s most legendary epic fails. Under the guise of 'smashing old customs,' it was a massive wave of vandalism that sought to murder and annihilate everything China had built—history, culture, traditions, intangible heritage, and even royal recipes and martial arts. People say half of Chinese history was wiped out then. There aren't even accurate stats on how many items were smashed or how many people were killed.

Post image
AI Translated Image
Post image

Mao-worshipping Red Guards swarmed everywhere, smashing, killing, and dragging people off. Public executions weren't rare, and intellectuals were labeled 'remnants of capitalism' and sent to labor camps. This was a freakish era of cultural self-harm that lasted from May 1966 to December 1976. Here are some major artifacts that somehow survived being ground into dust.

Post image
AI Translated Image
Post image
AI Translated Image

Terracotta Army: Discovered in March 1974 when the heat of the Cultural Revolution was finally dying down, so it escaped destruction.

Post image
Post image
AI Translated Image
Post image
AI Translated Image

Lingyin Temple: An ancient temple built about 1,700 years ago in Hangzhou by an Indian monk. Premier Zhou Enlai (the CCP’s No. 2 at the time) ordered a portrait of Mao Zedong to be hung at the entrance before the Red Guards could storm in, so they couldn't touch it.

Post image
AI Translated Image
Post image
Post image
AI Translated Image
Post image
AI Translated Image

Potala Palace: Residence of the successive Dalai Lamas. Premier Zhou Enlai sent in the army while simultaneously using the excuse that they needed to 'preserve evidence of how much the Tibetan feudal ruling class exploited the people' to protect it.

Post image
Post image
AI Translated Image
Post image
AI Translated Image
Post image
AI Translated Image

Forbidden City: Premier Zhou Enlai sent in troops to protect it.

Post image
Post image
AI Translated Image
Post image
AI Translated Image

Temple of Confucius in Qufu: A representative Confucian shrine built in Confucius' hometown. While the Red Guards were in the middle of trashing it, Zhou Enlai ordered them to stop. The parts that were already destroyed were restored after the Cultural Revolution.

Post image
Post image
AI Translated Image
Post image
AI Translated Image
Post image
AI Translated Image
Post image

Mogao Caves in Dunhuang: Home to numerous Buddhist relics from the Han to Tang dynasties. Premier Zhou Enlai sent in the army to protect it.

Post image
AI Translated Image
Post image
AI Translated Image
Post image
AI Translated Image

Qianling Mausoleum: The tomb of Wu Zetian, the only female emperor of the Tang Dynasty. Zhou Enlai personally ordered that no damage be done.

Post image
AI Translated Image
Post image
AI Translated Image

Mawangdui Mummy: The mummy of a Han Dynasty noblewoman. Zhou Enlai ordered that it should not be harmed.

Post image
AI Translated Image
Post image

Fangshan Stone Sutras: Over 14,000 stone slabs engraved with Buddhist scriptures during the Sui Dynasty. Zhou Enlai sent troops to the temple where they were stored to protect them.

Post image
AI Translated Image
Post image

Puyi: The last emperor of the Qing Dynasty. Premier Zhou Enlai sent security forces to protect him from the Red Guards.

Post image
Post image
AI Translated Image
Post image
AI Translated Image
Post image
AI Translated Image

Goguryeo and Balhae History: Premier Zhou Enlai actually stated that Goguryeo and Balhae are part of the history of the Korean (Han) people.

HistoryChinaCultural HeritageEducationalArchive
🫡

"Users are floored that Premier Zhou Enlai single-handedly hard-carried what's left of Chinese history against the Red Guard chaos."

#Mixed

Best Comments (0)

Log in to join the discussion

Knaru - Korean Community Aggregated Feed

Latest Updates

Continue Browsing

Community Vibe

🎉
🎉 Party Mode!80°

Based on 128 posts in 6h

😄 67🌈 47💪 7🤔 5

Weekly Best Gallery

이타치가 마이트 가이를 보고 튄 이유.JPG노쇼인데 손님이 오길 기다리는 식당주인.. 옆에서 식사하던 임성근 "4인분 어치 저희주세요"그놈의 또문철 유튜브는 맨날 레전드래.gif사랑이 사촌 근황돌맹이 덕후친구가 자랑하며 보내준 사진.jpg해군으로 먹고 사는 도시 진해

Live Activity

New Post[Weeb] Suddenly realized it's Idolmaster's 20th anniversary as the New Year starts

Community Stats

dogdrip
33%
fmkorea
23%
ruliweb
16%
ppomppu
15%
natepann
3%
dcinside
3%
clien
3%
mlbpark
1%
instiz
1%
todayhumor
1%
fmkorea_star
0%
fmkorea_movietv
0%
theqoo
0%

Trending Tags

View all →
HumorK-popHumorMemeViralKoreaGamingSportsAnimeFootballK-VarietyFood

Real-time Search

    No data available
AboutPrivacy PolicyTerms of Service

© 2024 kNaru. All rights reserved.

Related Posts

The country where people are suspiciously good at German
dogdrip

The country where people are suspiciously good at German

2m ago
View 25
The group that shatters your illusions fastest once you actually study WWII
dogdrip

The group that shatters your illusions fastest once you actually study WWII

2m ago
View 55
kNaru
clien

Joseon was a way bigger powerhouse in its early prime than we think... and the role of King Taejong

4m ago
View 43
Close-up shots of China's cursed merchant-ship-turned-drone-carrier
dogdrip

Close-up shots of China's cursed merchant-ship-turned-drone-carrier

51m ago
View 86
The scientist who gave up 9 trillion won.jpg
ppomppu

The scientist who gave up 9 trillion won.jpg

1h ago
View 97