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[[File:Qinshihuang.jpg|thumb|250px|Qin Shi Huang, the first emperor of Imperial China.]]
'''Qin Shi Huang''' or '''Shi Huangdi''', originally named '''Ying Zheng''' (259 BCE - 210 BCE), was the first emperor of {{Wiki|Imperial China}} and the founder of the {{Wiki|Qin Dynasty}}.<ref name="Wikipedia">[[wikipedia:Qin Shi Huang|''Wikipedia'': Qin Shi Huang]]</ref>
'''Qin Shi Huang''' or '''Shi Huangdi''', originally named '''Ying Zheng''' (259 BCE - 210 BCE), was the first emperor of {{Wiki|Imperial China}} and the founder of the {{Wiki|Qin Dynasty}}.<ref name="Wikipedia">[[wikipedia:Qin Shi Huang|''Wikipedia'': Qin Shi Huang]]</ref>


==Biography==
Qin Shi Huang came into possession of a [[Staves of Eden|Staff of Eden]] sometime during his time as emperor from 221 to 210 BCE. With the Staff of Eden, Qin used its power to control the minds of people to build the {{Wiki|Great Wall of China}} to fend off Mongolian raiders.
Qin Shi Huang came into possession of a [[Staves of Eden|Staff of Eden]] sometime during his time as emperor from 221 to 210 BCE. With the Staff of Eden, Qin used its power to control the minds of people to build the {{Wiki|Great Wall of China}} to fend off Mongolian raiders.



Revision as of 20:29, 28 January 2013


Qin Shi Huang or Shi Huangdi, originally named Ying Zheng (259 BCE - 210 BCE), was the first emperor of Imperial China and the founder of the Qin Dynasty.[1]

Qin Shi Huang came into possession of a Staff of Eden sometime during his time as emperor from 221 to 210 BCE. With the Staff of Eden, Qin used its power to control the minds of people to build the Great Wall of China to fend off Mongolian raiders.

In addition, Qin Shi Huang oversaw the construction of his immense mausoleum and the life-sized terracotta army that guarded it, as well as a national road system. All of these projects came with considerable human cost.

During his reign, the Templars assisted Qin Shi Huang. Qin Shi Huang put Imperial China under Templar control. The Assassins tried to poison him with mercury, but failed. Qin Shi Huang was eventually killed in 210 BCE by the Assassin Wei Yu, who stabbed him with a spear.[2]

References