Terracotta Warriors Museum 秦始皇兵马俑博物馆
In 1974, farmers digging a well struck the 20th century's greatest archaeological discovery: 8,000 life-size terracotta soldiers with individualized faces, guarding Emperor Qin Shi Huang's tomb for 2,200 years. Bronze weapons found among them remain razor-sharp, thanks to a chromium-oxide coating that anticipated modern anti-corrosion technology by two millennia.
Xi'an City Wall 西安城墙
Completed in 1370 under the Hongwu Emperor, this is China's most complete ancient city wall: 14 km of rammed-earth-and-brick fortification standing 12 metres high and 15 metres wide — broad enough for two chariots abreast. The 98 watchtowers create overlapping fields of crossbow fire with no blind spots.
Great Mosque of Xi'an 西安大清真寺
Founded in 742 CE during the Tang dynasty, one of China's oldest mosques. Its architecture abandons domes and minarets for traditional Chinese pavilions and courtyards — yet every element is oriented toward Mecca. Arabic calligraphy rendered in Chinese brush strokes creates one of Asia's most striking cultural fusions.
Cultural Highlights
🍜 Signature Dish: Biang Biang Noodles (biángbiáng面) — Impossibly wide, belt-like hand-pulled noodles named for the sound they make when slapped against the counter. Dressed with blazing chili oil, Sichuan peppercorn, and vinegar. The character for 'biang' — 58 strokes — is the most complex in the language.
🎨 Artifact: Tang Sancai Pottery (唐三彩) — Tri-color glazed pottery of the Tang dynasty featuring amber, green, and cream glazes on horses, camels, and court ladies. Camel figurines laden with trade goods are vivid testimony to Silk Road cosmopolitanism.
🎵 Music: Qinqiang Opera (秦腔) — The oldest surviving Chinese opera form, originating in the Qin heartland 2,000+ years ago. Known as 'the roar of Qin' for its powerful vocal style and crashing percussion. It influenced every subsequent operatic tradition in China.