Qin
 Shi Huang holds a central place in Chinese history for being the first 
emperor who united the country. He is also well known for his part in 
the construction of the spectacular Great Wall and his splendid 
terracotta army. To ensure his rule in the afterlife, this emperor 
commanded more than 700,000 conscripts from all parts of the country to 
build him a grand mausoleum as luxurious as any of the palaces he had in
 mortal life. Legend says that numerous treasures were placed in the 
tomb. As time passed, no one knew exactly what was put in the grand 
palace.
According
 to the archeological team that went to the mausoleum, the height of 115
 meters recorded in most historical documents was just a figure copied 
down from the unfinished due to a nationwide uprising of peasants. After
 the emperor's corpse was placed in the chamber, the tomb mound project 
began. Later, about half of the laborer were transferred to the 
construction site of another palace building. When the peasant army 
approaches the mausoleum of Emperor Qin Shi Huang, the second emperor of
 the dynasty, who had taken the throne from his dead father, hastily 
organized the remaining workers on the construction site to fight 
against the rebels. No more soil was added onto the hillock later.
Opinions
 also differ on how many gates the underground palace contains. Some 
said there were two, one made of stone and the other of bronze. Others 
said that there were six because Emperor Qin Shi Huang has always 
considered the number "six" auspicious. After reading through piles of 
ancient documents, archeologists say that the exact number was recorded 
clearly in Records of the Historian, a great historical book written by 
Si Ma Qian. He wrote that, "When the emperor died, he was placed in the 
underground palace. Then the middle gate was closed and the outer gate 
was shut down. All workmen were entombed. No one can escape from there."
The
 emperor's coffin and all his burial articles were placed inside the 
middle gate. When the palace was shut down, workmen were busy working in
 it. Within seconds, however, they were entombed along the emperor and 
become the burial sacrifices themselves. From the Si Ma Qian's 
description, the underground palace had three gates: an outer gate, a 
middle gate and an unmentioned inner gate. In addition, in Si Ma Qian's 
record, the middle gate was "closed" which meant it had two planks, and 
the outer gate was "shut down", which meant it slide down vertically. 
Besides that, the middle door was locked automatically once it was 
closed. It was designed deliberately to prevent any mechanism as the 
middle one and the three gates were located on a straight line.