About: Nurhachi's ashes   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/COCtJGRxxvPcVVBGu1hR9w==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

After Emperor Nurhachi died in 1626, his ashes were collected in a jade funeral urn. Warning: The following section is ambiguously canon. It contains information that originates in a source that has not been deemed definitively canon. In 1903, the ashes were stolen from their resting place in Peking. The remains were ferried downriver from Shanghai aboard the Rising Moon by a gang of bandits led by Shen Ch'un on behalf of a secret society looking to overthrow the Manchus in favor of a representative government.

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Nurhachi's ashes
rdfs:comment
  • After Emperor Nurhachi died in 1626, his ashes were collected in a jade funeral urn. Warning: The following section is ambiguously canon. It contains information that originates in a source that has not been deemed definitively canon. In 1903, the ashes were stolen from their resting place in Peking. The remains were ferried downriver from Shanghai aboard the Rising Moon by a gang of bandits led by Shen Ch'un on behalf of a secret society looking to overthrow the Manchus in favor of a representative government.
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:indiana-jon...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:indianajone...iPageUsesTemplate
discoverer
Text
  • Nurhachi's Marshall College entry
Discovery date
  • 1935(xsd:integer)
collector
url
  • marshall/historical/nurhachi/
Culture
Location
Artifact Name
  • Nurhachi's Ashes
abstract
  • After Emperor Nurhachi died in 1626, his ashes were collected in a jade funeral urn. Warning: The following section is ambiguously canon. It contains information that originates in a source that has not been deemed definitively canon. In 1903, the ashes were stolen from their resting place in Peking. The remains were ferried downriver from Shanghai aboard the Rising Moon by a gang of bandits led by Shen Ch'un on behalf of a secret society looking to overthrow the Manchus in favor of a representative government. However, the ship was sent off course by a storm and attacked by a sea serpent which wrecked the Rising Moon on a tiny atoll beyond a chain of islands northeast of Ningpo while Nurhaci's urn sat in the hold. Ambiguously canon information ends here. The ashes were later smuggled out of the country and sold on the black market. In 1935, Indiana Jones was hired by Lao Che, a Chinese crime lord, to retrieve the ashes. Jones discovered the ashes sitting in a Turkish pawn shop in Istanbul, and brought them to Shanghai. Lao Che's son, Kao Kan, attempted to kill Jones and take the ashes before the scheduled meeting, but Jones stopped him and Kao Kan left with one less finger. Nevertheless, Jones took the artifact to Club Obi Wan to trade with Lao Che in exchange for the Peacock's Eye diamond. Lao Che took the urn into his possession but double-crossed Jones by keeping the diamond and poisoning the archaeologist, who ultimately had to fight his way out of the club with the antidote.
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