• WWW.THEHISTORYBLOG.COM
    Tomb of 8th c. Silla hostage prince found in China
    For the first time, archaeologists have discovered the tomb of a Tang Dynasty hostage prince from the Silla Kingdom of Korea in Xian, Shaanxi Province, northwest China. An epitaph found in the tomb names the occupant as Kim Young and provides a full biography of his life. It is only the second Silla hostage tomb stele known, and the other one appeared with no provenance information, so this is the only example to be archaeologically excavated in its original context.The tomb was unearthed by a team from the Shaanxi Provincial Institute of Archaeology in June of 2022 at the Dongjiang Village archaeological site, located a little over a mile north of the ancient Tang Dynasty capital of Changan. Tomb M15, a blue brick chamber tomb with a long, sloping entrance passage leading to a single burial chamber, was comparable in shape and design to other medium-sized Tang Dynasty tombs in the area from the same period. It had been looted in antiquity, but the tomb raiders had left behind 83 funerary furnishings, including red clay pottery figurines of personified zodiac signs, celestial kings, fearsome tomb guardian beasts and a menagerie of 58 animals (camels, horses, sheep, cows, pigs, dogs, chickens).The greatest treasure the looters left behind as far as archaeologists are concerned was a bluestone epitaph. It consists of a square, domed cover decorated with clouds and peonies around the edge and corners with central inscription written in ancient seal script that reads Epitaph of the Late Lord Kim of the Great Tang. The main inscription is carved on the block in regular script. It is 557 characters long and records the accomplishment of Kim Young and his ancestors.A little background context: relations between Silla Korea and Tang China began in 622 A.D., when Silla King Jinpyeong sent envoys to the Tang Emperor Li Yuan just four years after he had overthrown the previous emperor and founded a new dynasty. Silla was then one of three kingdoms on the Korean Peninsula, and Jinpyeong wanted Chinese support in his conflicts against the rival Baekje and Goguryeo kingdoms. Sillas establishment of diplomatic ties with Tang came with a hefty payment of tribute, something Goguryeo had refused to do, and Jinpyeong was able to use that to his advantage when he appealed to Emperor Taizong of Tang to get Baekje to cease hostilities when they interfered with tribute deliveries.Jinpyeong died in 632 A.D. without a male heir. His daughter ascended the throne as Queen Seondeok, the 27th Silla ruler and its first queen. Emperor Taizong of Tang refused to recognize her as the ruler of Silla but he accepted her diplomats and tribute just fine. Silla ties with the Tang Dynasty bore full fruit in 660 when allied Silla and Tang troops conquered Baekje and in 668 when they conquered Goguryeo, making the Silla king ruler of the unified Korean Peninsula. The Tang emperor wanted a piece, however, and in a few years the alliance was broken and Silla fought to keep Tang from colonizing the peninsula.Ultimately the Silla won the Silla-Tang War in 676 A.D., albeit with some loss of territory, but diplomatic relations between the two dynasties stopped entirely until they were re-established by King Seongdeok of Silla (702737) and Emperor Xuanzong of Tang (712755). This time the links held and the Tang emperors and Silla kings would remain allies for centuries.Tribute was still paid, mind you, and while Tang recognized Sillas rulership of the peninsula, it considered the Silla Kingdom a vassal state. The hostage system was a part of the tribute structure, a form of diplomatic exchange that secured the vassal states allegiance. Hostages had to be people of noble birth and they were granted high government positions and integrating fully into the elite of Tang society, often working as envoys from the emperor to their country of origin.King Seongdeok sent his own cousin to the Tang court as a political hostage after the rapprochement, and Kim Young was his grandson, the third generation to serve at the Tang court.According to the inscription, Kim Young was a Silla prince who served as a political hostage, or zhizi, in Tang China. He was born in the sixth year of the Tianbao reign (747) and died in 794 at the age of 48 in the Taipingli guest residence in Changan.According to historical records, three generations of his family served as hostages in the Tang Dynasty and were granted official posts. Kim Young himself twice accompanied Tang envoys on diplomatic missions to Silla and participated in ceremonial duties, including mourning and investiture missions. His funeral was organized by Tang officials, with the magistrate of Changan county overseeing the arrangements. Both his burial site and coffin were bestowed by imperial decree, demonstrating the Tang courts favor and respect for him.Of particular note is the epitaphs reference to Kims wife, a rare mention of marital ties involving Silla hostages. His wife was from the influential Wang clan of Taiyuan and the daughter of Wang Qianling, magistrate of Yanshi county. This suggests that hostage Silla princes stationed at the Tang court often married into elite Chinese families.The discovery of a Tang-era tomb of a Silla prince in Xian provides tangible evidence of the hostage system between the Tang Dynasty and its vassal states, Liu Zheng, a member of the Chinese Society of Cultural Relics, told the Global Times.It reflects how the Tang empire maintained suzerainty over Silla through diplomatic and cultural exchanges.
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    What Was The Scavengers Daughter? Inside The Grisly History Of This 16th-Century Torture Device
    Invented during the reign of England's King Henry VIII for use at the Tower of London, the scavenger's daughter was a metal device that forced its victims into a kneeling position, painfully compressing their bodies until they bled from the ears.The post What Was The Scavengers Daughter? Inside The Grisly History Of This 16th-Century Torture Device appeared first on All That's Interesting.
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    Today in History for 22nd July 2025
    Historical Events259 - Saint Dionysius elected as Pope, succeeding Sixtus II1950 - Frank Worrell completes 261 v England at Trent Bridge1950 - King Leopold returns to Belgium after 6 years in exile1960 - Cuba nationalizes all US-owned sugar factories1991 - Jeffrey Dahmer confesses to killing 17 men in 1978More Historical Events Famous Birthdays1844 - William Archibald Spooner, English Oxford Don and reverend and inventor (spoonerisms), born in London, England (d. 1930)1878 - Lucien Febvre, French historian (Un destin: Martin Luther), born in Nancy, France (d. 1956)1882 - Edward Hopper, American painter (Nighthawks, House by the Railroad), born in Upper Nyack, New York (d. 1967)1967 - Rhys Ifans [Evans], Welsh actor (Notting Hill; The Replacements; Enduring Love), and rock singer (The Peth), born in Haverfordwest, Wales1972 - Colin Ferguson, Canadian actor known for "Eureka", born in Montreal, QuebecMore Famous Birthdays Famous Deaths1794 - Jean-Benjamin de La Borde, French composer, dies at 591826 - Giuseppe Piazzi, Italian astronomer (found 1st asteroid-Ceres), dies at 801864 - William H. T. Walker, American Major General (Confederate Army), killed in action at 47 during the Atlanta Campaign2005 - Eugene Record American songwriter and singer (The Chi-Lites) (b. 1940)2008 - Joe Beck, American session and jazz guitarist (Don Sebesky; Gil Evans; Gato Barbieri; Esther Phillips), and bandleader, dies of lung cancer at 62More Famous Deaths
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    Fans Think They Have Cracked The Metro Exodus Sequel Announcement
    Following the release of Metro Exodus in 2019, franchise fans have been left in the dark about what's next for the franchise.
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