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  • In China's Valley of the Kings there stands a tall carved stone

  • It marks the tomb of a woman who rose from lowly concubine to become emperor of China

  • The only woman to dare claim that title

  • But China's female Emperor has gone down in history as a controversial and deeply divisive ruler

  • To have a woman with such power

  • really threatened the establishment

  • Not only did Wu Zetian rock the boat in some ways. She overturned it

  • It would have been a very dangerous thing to get in the way of Wu Zetian

  • Since her death 1,300 years ago wu zetian has been remembered as a callous tyrant who brought calamity to china

  • But now

  • Extraordinary new discoveries are revealing a very different picture of her reign from ancient tombstones

  • I've been waiting since this was excavated. I am ecstatic

  • to Buddhist temples

  • I honestly wasn't expecting that that is really exciting seeing this with your eyes is incredible experience

  • Lost treasures have even more fantastic than I thought it would be

  • Now for the first time experts are discovering how one woman managed to rule all the Imperial China

  • And whether Wu Zetian really was an evil dictator or one of the most misunderstood leaders in history

  • The only female emperor in China's 2,000 years of Imperial history was named Wu Zetian

  • move the celestial

  • She first entered court in 637 ad as a 13 year old concubine

  • Part of the hareem of mistresses serving emperor Taizong of the Tang dynasty

  • Tang Taizong had more than a hundred concubines by repute. She was beautiful. She was charming. She was entertaining

  • She also had a real zest for life

  • Concubine Wu soon got herself noticed

  • When she entered the palace

  • She quickly gained favour of this emperor and her relationship of become closer and with the rise her of her influence at court

  • and

  • She proved to be politically very very skilful and she's very shrewd

  • When the old Emperor died Wu Zetian became at first concubine to his son Gaozong

  • Then in 655 he made her his Empress

  • But emperor gaozong was a sickly man

  • And gradually Wu became the real power behind the throne

  • Until in 690 with her husband dead Wu Zetian stepped from the shadows and declared herself Emperor

  • Yet China's ancient chroniclers were scathing in their accounts of her rise to power

  • History tells us a really dark and bleak picture about Empress Wu

  • One of the most brutal stories we have is that she killed her own child just to frame the previous Empress and

  • gain station at court

  • We're also told that Wu Zhao had her two

  • Rivals legs and arms cut off and then dip them in a vat of wine and let them slowly bleed to death

  • So this paints a picture of a devious

  • manipulating

  • calculating

  • self-serving and absolutely ruthless Virago

  • hell-bent on power

  • Even after she claimed the throne we're told Wu Zetian was ruthless in her reign

  • This is the tomb of Wu Zetian's second son Li Xian. He was a threat to his mother

  • Li Xian was accused of treason and he was exiled to the most remote

  • corner of the Chinese Empire locked in a room and

  • forced to commit suicide by poisoning

  • So this is a mother killing her own son so that she can hold on to power

  • Wu Zetian led China for nearly 50 years

  • According to legend she was a tyrant whose reign brought disaster to the Empire

  • Now archaeologists run earthing new evidence the challenges this version of Wu's story

  • The professor Zhang Jianlin is the world's leading archaeologists to the tang era

  • Today the city of Xian has grown to encompass old Chang'an, Wu's capital

  • The population of 12 million Xian is rapidly expanding

  • It's also home to professor Zhang's conservation facility

  • Historian dr. Harry Rothschild has heard about some intriguing recent finds that date to Wu's rein. Whoa

  • It's amazing seeing all these Tang artifacts

  • I've been studying Wu Zhao, Wu Zetian for 17 years and finally here

  • We are at Ground Zero you can sense her everywhere here in Chang'an

  • The figurines show life in Wu's capital the musicians traders and nobles buried with the dead to ensure a comfortable

  • afterlife

  • but there's also something unexpected here a

  • first clue to what Wu's China was really like

  • So we're looking at an unprecedented boost for the position of women

  • you're talking about a female Emperor here after all and and so that

  • Translated directly in this sort of greater opportunity and greater freedom for women in the late 7th in early 8th century

  • It seems like there may be more to Wu Zetian that meets the eye

  • Ancient chroniclers denigrated her reign

  • But many recent tomb discoveries like the women in men's clothing hinted a rather different story

  • Professor Tonia Eckfeld is an expert on Tang era tombs

  • She's on her way to see one of the most amazing archaeological finds in all Chinese history

  • It's amazing it's even more fantastic than I thought it would be

  • This is the fabled Phoenix crown of ancient China a

  • long-lost treasure from the Tang era

  • written about in ancient texts, but never seen

  • until now

  • This priceless headdress is held under lock and key and can only be viewed by special appointment

  • Tonia believes that is a vital clue to the truth about Wu Zetian's China

  • There's an enormous amount to investigate in this piece

  • Looking closely the metal work is filigree, and there's a lot of granulation

  • Granulation consists of tiny little beads of gold

  • The whole crown is like a peacock displaying its tail

  • There are very very fine flowers made of mother-of-pearl and pearl. There are even fine bunches of grapes made of Chinese glass

  • So really what we see here is something

  • cosmopolitan and something rich

  • something fashionable full of

  • luxury items not only in the making of it, but also in the imagery involved

  • Professors Jung's team found the Phoenix crown in a grave that was already in exceptional find, a tomb that had never been raided

  • Inside was a skeleton and on the skull the beehive hairstyle

  • studded with jewels

  • The skeleton was of a young woman named Li Chui a minor descendant of the Tang royal family

  • For 18 months the team carefully picked out every single jewel and stone

  • Slowly piecing together the headdress to reveal its true glory

  • But when they used x-ray chromatography to discover where the different jewels and stones came from they were in for a surprise

  • The headdress has carnelian from Uzbekistan

  • 2,900 miles to the west of Chang'an, garnet from India 3,000 miles southwest

  • Amber from Iran 4,000 miles away and ivory from Sri Lanka

  • 4500 miles from Wu's capital

  • The crown gives us clues about Wu Zetian's society. Life was rich. There's a lot of luxury

  • It was a real high point in the arts

  • What we can see here is the embodiment of all of the wealth and all of the treasure that the Tang court could attract

  • Li Chui wasn't even a princess if she was buried wearing this priceless headdress

  • Clear evidence of the extraordinary wealth of China at the time

  • Her tomb holds one final secret

  • She was buried with the Jade silkworm in her hand

  • Another clue that reveals Wu's ambitions to make her China the wealthiest empire in the world

  • In seventh century China a woman named Wu Zetian rose from lonely concubine to Empress

  • With her husband, the Emperor's sick. She ruled the Empire in all but name

  • Ancient chroniclers dismissed her reign as a time of calamity

  • But today's experts think the truth may be very different

  • In a tomb 50 miles northwest of wu's capital city, Chang'an

  • Tonia Eckfeld is investigating murals that provide strong evidence of Wu's influence and power

  • Here we can see a mural of foreign ambassadors coming to court

  • Ambassadors came from far and wide in this mural we can see a Mongolian a Korean and a townshend monk

  • perhaps from Rome or Syria

  • There's a man from Xinjian from Greece and from Persia

  • It's interesting because we can see that the The Ambassadors are in

  • quite subservient positions their hands are clasped before them and

  • Seem quite in awe of the situation

  • The mural suggests that Wu Zetian was a respected international leader of her time

  • I think Wu Zetian was a consummate politician

  • she saw advantage in the use of

  • diplomacy rather than warfare and led the society that was quite open and open to foreigners

  • Many foreigners at high level beat a path to her door

  • Recent research suggests that there were 25,000 foreigners living in Wu's Chang'an

  • Many were traders and more than anything, they were after one Chinese product.

  • Since the 4th millennium BC China had produced the finest quality silk

  • By Wu's era the demand for Chinese silk had made it as valuable as gold

  • The ancient trade routes of the Silk Road began in Chang'an spreading east and west linking China to other nations

  • But by the mid 7th century bandits and robbers threatened to stop trade in its tracks

  • new discoveries reveal Wu Zetian's master strain

  • She built military outposts far into Central Asia securing safe passage all along the Silk routes

  • Harry Rothschild has come to the very start of the Silk Road in Chang'an to find the latest archaeological evidence of trade in Wu's capital

  • This is incredible. We've been allowed to come right down here into the Western market

  • We're standing right on the edge of the canal

  • looking right across into this square where you had all of these stalls arrayed where rows of iron mongers and butchers and

  • tanner's and

  • silversmiths, goldsmith's, calligraphy brush salesmen would be arrayed where you could find anything under the Sun

  • If you get down closely here you can see

  • Ruts that have been left in in the earth

  • From the carts that went over this bridge you really feel the ambience of the Western market

  • In Wu Zetian's Chang'an, the east and west markets marked the start of the silk road

  • In the West market goods from lands to the west of Chang'an were bought and sold

  • Silk Road trade not only made Wu's Empire wealthy it brought so many

  • foreigners to China that her capital became one of the first truly

  • cosmopolitan cities in the world. People from all across the world traveled to China and many chose to stay

  • And this multicultural influence can still be felt in present day Xi'an

  • We are walking along the Huimin street the Chinese Muslims street on the very heart of old

  • Tang China and it is bustling it is vibrant. It is full of energy

  • As you see by the milling bustle going on behind me now

  • I think these are sugared figs or dried figs here

  • these came from along the Silk Road from from Persia

  • So this is a kind of wheat kernel candy

  • and he's pulling this taffy then afterwards they'll take the taffy and they'll

  • Roll it out with pumpkin seeds or with sesame seeds and then turn it into this hard candy

  • The sesame came from Persia and the Middle East along the Silk Road

  • So this is this is sort of the fruit of something that was trafficked thirteen hundred years ago during Wu Zetian's time

  • It is good. I think in terms of the

  • multiculturalism the vibrance the bustle the energy just the constant commercial buzz

  • You have a great sense of what was going on during the time

  • By 662 with her husband the Emperor ill Empress Wu Zetian was an effective control of the whole Chinese Empire

  • Trade had brought wealth and luxury

  • Evident from the valuable artifacts that have been found and Wu wanted to flaunt this to the rest of the world

  • To do this she planned the expansion of the Imperial Palace on a scale never seen before

  • When archaeologists first uncovered the foundations they were amazed by what they found

  • This is one of the huge gated entrances rebuilt to scale on those very foundations

  • This is Danfeng Gate the southern gate of Daming palace

  • Just looking up at it it conjures a sense of awe

  • For me

  • It's a statement

  • It provides a sense of Imperial grandeur

  • It makes any one sort of standing before the gate feel a sense of their own smallness and insignificance

  • Wu Zetian's Daming Palace was the largest in the world

  • Completed in just three years the scale of the complex outshone anything anyone had ever seen

  • Look at the size of Daming Palace

  • This is twice as big as old pompeii

  • It's five times bigger than the Forbidden City of the Ming and Qing Dynasty Emperor's it's twenty-two times the size of the Acropolis

  • The scope the grand juror. It's it's absolutely staggering.

  • You can read about it

  • but you don't really appreciate that magnitude until you step out on this balcony and you look out at this vista

  • There are archery grounds. There are polo grounds, cockfighting arenas,

  • places for drama troops to practice and that's just the beginning. There are three or four more palaces beyond that

  • Emissaries coming from foreign countries would come in with their jaws dropping with just a sort of starry-eyed

  • wonder and they would feel like they were looking at a celestial world a paradise on earth.

  • I do think that was about imposing her power with the majesty and size of Daming Palace

  • But Harry thinks this place is unusual in more than just its extreme size

  • Chang'an when it was first designed was the model of perfect Imperial symmetry

  • The old Imperial Palace was in the north central position within the Tang capital Chang'an. This new Daming Palace

  • was outside of the city walls altogether. It's very unusual to build a palace

  • outside of this usual model of imperial symmetry

  • there's one good reason for 12 years Wu Zhao had

  • languished in the old imperial palace. For her,

  • this was a chance to get a new start to distance herself from her lowly and obscure past as a fifth rank talent

  • Here where you have this stunning new imperial grandeur

  • was an opportunity to sort of reinvent herself

  • It's becoming clear that Wu Zetian made China a global superpower

  • Contrary to how the legends were written she was at the center of a web of trade

  • wealth and political influence that stretched from Japan to the Mediterranean

  • In the seventh century Wu Zetian's capital city Chang'an was in a class of its own

  • So Chang'an during Wu Zetian's time would have been an absolutely massive city

  • There's supposed to be almost a million people living within the city walls and another million outside

  • which just outclasses anything else in the world at that time

  • Jonathan Dugdale from Birmingham University thinks he knows one reason for Wu Zetian's remarkable success

  • She would win the support of the common people through the reinvigorated religion that was sweeping China

  • Buddhism

  • Wu Zetian realized patronizing Buddhism was a great way to please the people and what better way than building new temples and pagodas

  • So one of the main ones she built was this one right behind this the great wild goose pagoda

  • The great goose pagoda was originally built in 652

  • As someone who studied pagodas for a long time, this is

  • particularly awesome

  • The pagoda was an important temple housing sacred Buddhist writings

  • But just 50 years after it was built. It was destroyed in an earthquake

  • Wu, who had been brought up in the Buddhist faith spending time in a nunnery,

  • decided to rebuild the pagoda but on a much bigger scale

  • Jonathan suspects that this new building was a record breaker and

  • that Wu surpassed herself in her desire to make her mark in her people's faith

  • And he thinks he can prove it.

  • I would really like to find out how tall this building was when Wu Zetian rebuilt it

  • Because it'd be really interesting if she's decided to build it significantly bigger for a reason

  • But first he has a problem to solve. Wu Zetian's pagoda was partially damaged by a second earthquake

  • The top three floors toppled

  • So Jonathan has to work out how high her structure would have been with the missing floors

  • onwards and upwards

  • One two Okay that's 40 steps for that one and that put us on the fourth floor now

  • 35, 36, 37, 38

  • One two three...

  • He's found a pattern in the number of steps

  • Previous floors we've gone from 43 to 40 to 38 37. So for the next floor is either 37 or 36

  • We should make an accurate calculation

  • 34, 35, 36, 37

  • This is good, we're still decreasing so this is good we might be able to do something last one

  • Let's do the math people

  • By working out the pattern and height of the steps per story

  • 136

  • Jonathan calculates with the missing three floors the true height of wu's pagoda was close to a staggering 300 feet high

  • Which would have made it not only the tallest brick pagoda in Asia

  • But possibly one of the tallest buildings in the world at that time

  • It would have been like nothing else that anyone had seen before in the cityscape

  • now it still looks impressive. But in those days it would have soared above absolutely everything else in the sea

  • Who built this record-breaking structure as a statement targeted directly at her people

  • There's so many different things

  • she stands to gain from building a massive pagoda in such a visual space like this

  • The majority of the population of Chang'an at this time are Buddhists and they will see that she's supporting Buddhism. She's supporting their religion

  • Wu Zetian ordered the building of new Buddhist temples in every town in her empire

  • creating allies among the common people of China

  • And she didn't stop there

  • 250 miles east of Chang'an in Henan province are the Longmen Grottoes Caves

  • Historian Lou Young thinks there may be key to understanding Wu's power

  • This is a sacred place for Buddhist. The religion and pilgrims have have been coming here for centuries

  • But I have been told there is a connection that link and pursue directly to their faith

  • Members of the elite paid vast sums to carve small caves into this sacred hillside

  • There are over 1,400 housing over 100,000 Buddha figures

  • The smallest is just an inch tall

  • The biggest is an imposing

  • 57 feet high

  • commissioned by Wu Zetian herself and

  • It has a story to tell

  • Wow, isn't this impressive?

  • What a view it is gigantic

  • The official name of this Buddha is Vairocana, which is the radiant Buddha of a great Sun

  • This is basically a universal Buddha

  • Symbolized the the power and indominus of this religion

  • Wu Zetian wanted to put herself at the heart of buddhism in the eyes of her people

  • To do this, it's possible

  • she took one audacious step and ordered the statue to be carved in her own image

  • The legend says that this statue actually is modeled after her face

  • She want to make this a statement of her power

  • This will give her more credibility because this is the age of Buddhism and there's a massive follower of this particular religion and by

  • creating this temple, she basically put herself on the center stage of of not just religious action, but also the society in general

  • You know the seeing this with your own eyes is incredible experience

  • This is so impressive to me and I think she got what she wanted

  • The longmen grottoes and the great goose pagoda

  • suggests that Wu Zetian was a skillful tactician who knew how to use religion to promote her own status and keep her Empire happy

  • And up river from the giant buddha the series of very recent

  • archaeological discoveries reveal another of the secrets of her success

  • Wow

  • This is spectacular

  • Here in Luoyang

  • Professor wangju and his team have been excavating giant granaries designed for storing rice

  • Inscriptions enabled the team to date each granary precisely

  • Wu Zetian ordered rice from eastern China to be brought here by canal

  • stockpiled in these vast grain stores then

  • redistributed in times of need

  • During the early 7th century China suffered prolonged droughts leading to famines

  • But under Wu Zetian,

  • improvements to the rice stores design were to prove invaluable

  • Wow the massive scale of this granary really testify

  • The the power and the capability of Empress Wu's regime and and she is a very capable ruler

  • That the grain kept here can last for many years

  • So this is not just contributed to the stability of her regime but also for the future of tang dynasty as well

  • Archeology is revealing that Wu Zetian was an efficient administrator who ensured her people and her soldiers were always fed

  • But despite her successes, as a woman she could never rely on the support of the aristocratic establishment

  • She needed allies

  • So in a radical break with tradition, Wu allowed commoners to join in the administration of her government

  • She encouraged women to be entrepreneurs and permitted Chinese women to divorce and marry freely for the first time

  • But in a moment of breathtaking audacity, she even appointed a female prime minister by the name of Shangguan Wan'er

  • Harry has been told of evidence professor Zhang's team have found in recent excavations in the Prime Minister's tomb

  • Suggesting her life had a controversial final chapter

  • This is

  • Shangguan Wan'er' epitaph I've been waiting since

  • September of 2013 when this was excavated for a chance to actually see this in person and it's finally happening today

  • So I am ecstatic

  • This says she had 47 springs and autumns

  • at the time of her death

  • But when Zhang's team found the prime minister's tomb

  • It had been purposely destroyed

  • And this destruction is key to understanding why the bleak picture of Wu Zetian has been passed on through the centuries

  • This was thorough, kind of malicious and intentional destruction that had been done to the tomb

  • Shangguan Wan'er's tomb had been dismantled by order of emperors Ruizong, Wu Zetian's sucessor

  • Harry believes

  • there is a direct link between this destruction and the chronicles the tell of Wu's evil and incompetence

  • Now that I know that Shangguan Wan'er's grave was dismantled

  • this is part of an intentional process an intentional destruction of

  • vestiges of female power during the late 7th and early 8th century

  • The Confucian patriarchy striking back and re-establishing normative power

  • By 690 ad

  • Wu Zetian had ascended the throne to become the first female emperor ever to rule the Chinese Empire

  • But her opponents were determined to unseat her

  • She had annihilated many many of her enemies

  • but where there's power there are always rivals and

  • There's always a contest

  • Although there is clearly more to Wu Zetian than the ancient writers led us to believe

  • There's also emerge that some of the tales of her callousness were not just propaganda

  • Art historian, Dr. Jenny Liu has discovered new texts in the tomb of Wu's

  • great granddaughter princess Yongtai that suggests even blood knew no mercy

  • I've studied other princess' epitaph as well

  • And this is a passage here, which I've never seen. You have the character for anger. Okay, and

  • anger at the

  • The two

  • boys

  • and their secret medicine

  • So this passage tells you what happened to princess Yongtai. These are characters that are usually used for

  • the

  • miscarriage or the loss of a child

  • and

  • It is the Zhang brothers secret medicine or poison that made her miscarriage leading to her death

  • This refers to Wu Zetian because it's very possible that

  • she was the instigator of the poison that Zhang brothers were very close to her and they did her bidding and she was known to

  • have pitted people against each other in court and she would cause one to poison or kill the other and

  • She did this with officials and now it seems maybe she did it with her

  • relations her kin.

  • What was the motive? Why? Why does she want the princess dead?

  • She was bearing the child of two of the strongest clans in contention for the throne and

  • it might be possible that she did not want this child to be born no matter the gender

  • It would have been a very dangerous thing to get in the way of Wu Zetian

  • As emperor of China Wu Zetian had successfully fought off all rivals to hold on to power

  • But the fight had been bloody

  • Wu Zetian became incredibly ruthless

  • She had hundreds of members of the ruling family executed

  • The violence and reign of terror you could say was extreme

  • But she was not without a conscience

  • She was very troubled by what she'd done

  • With her mind turning towards her afterlife, Wu wanted forgiveness of her sins

  • She wrote a confession and

  • had it engraved onto a golden tablet and had that tablet taken to a holy place to perform a sacred ritual

  • So here we are on Mount Song

  • It's the central of the five sacred peaks of ancient China and it became a very important place in Wu Zetian's later life

  • In the year 700, Wu Zetian came to this mountain

  • She had a golden tablet made on which she inscribes her sins

  • Which was then cast down the mountain as a as a form of absolution

  • And we know precisely what that gold tablet said because nearly

  • 1300 years later a farmer found it lying in the earth on the mountain slopes

  • Its description was short but its message profound

  • And said

  • The ruler Wu Zhao admires the true doubt with its long-lived immortal spirits

  • Her servant has been commissioned to go reverently to the pinnacle of the central peak of Mount Song and cast the golden tally that

  • might expiate her sinful nature

  • What you can tell by the fact she's throwing away this tablet in such a visible fashion is that she's really trying to demonstrate

  • To other people that she was repentant

  • It's a very visible

  • ceremonial thing it's it's saying I have sinned and I wish to be absolved of these sins and

  • And whether she actually believed that was the case or not

  • I think is is less important than the impression it would create to other people

  • The end of Wu Zetian's reign had become fraught with scheming and rebellion among the male nobility at her court

  • The higher she goes she becomes a tall poppy she becomes a bigger target

  • Jonathan has come to a remote location in the foothills of Mount Song that Wu retreated to in her last year's

  • It's awesome

  • I've wanted to come here for a long time

  • This is quite special

  • This is the Songyue pagoda it's

  • Important Wu Zetian's life because she's to come here to worship

  • It's 1,500 years old not only is it still standing, it still looks pretty good

  • So

  • Wu Zetian would have come into this probably into this very building because this is the original structure from 1500 years ago

  • I've never seen anything like this before. This is a phenomenal building

  • You can feel why Wu Zetian would want to come here

  • I mean Chang'an at this time is politically very difficult and she wants to come here to just escape all that

  • It's it's a place of safety and refuge

  • Throughout her life Wu' Zetian had shattered Confucian tradition

  • Rising from a lowly concubine to become the only female Emperor of China

  • She had achieved much

  • She made China a better place for women,

  • the Empire wealthy,

  • peaceful, her capital city

  • vibrant and cosmopolitan and her population fed and free to practice their religion

  • But the male establishment was closing in and the She Emperor was too old to fight back

  • When Wu Zetian's rule came to an end she was 80

  • In fact, she wasn't usurped

  • she

  • abdicated so

  • She was still maintaining her own sense of control

  • She lived for a few more months and she went quietly her time had come

  • Emperor Wu Zetian died in 705

  • This is Qianling the Tang dynasty mausoleum complex her final resting place

  • She's buried in a secret chamber

  • Deep inside the mountain alongside the Emperor she succeeded, her husband Gaozong

  • We're on the spiritual path

  • Walking toward Wu Zetian's tomb

  • It's impressive. It's daunting its powerful

  • The area that it covers is almost the same as the Daming Palace. So it's a huge area

  • The path to Wu Zetian's tomb is protected by Imperial bodyguards and sculptures to ward off evil spirits

  • Beside the Gateway entrance the two sets of foreign emissaries lined up to pay homage

  • Being here is a really awesome experience

  • It's so impressive. Wu Zetian may have held power for more than half a century

  • but in this place really her spirit and her sense of majesty and

  • authority and power has lived on for many centuries

  • Standing along Qianling is the carved steely honoring Wu Zetian's resting place

  • By her decree, it was left blank inviting historians to write of her achievements and

  • they did so

  • distorting her story for centuries

  • But having discovered more about her life, what would today's experts now carve upon the stand

  • I would write something along the lines of she was woman who did what she had to to stay in power

  • She was a great leader. She had a lot of political acumen

  • But most of all I'd say she was the woman that proved that in a man's world. You didn't need a man to lead it

  • The one word that I would put is just maverick because of the way that she went about gaining power

  • I'd write nothing for her entire

  • Idiosyncratic

  • unprecedented political career

  • Defied labels and for thirteen hundred years. She's defied historical verdict

  • I think that the the blankness of the steely is a perfect monument

In China's Valley of the Kings there stands a tall carved stone

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