Once upon a time, there was a child named Ma Liang. Father and mother died long ago, and they made a living by cutting firewood and grass by themselves. I don't know when colorful lights appeared in the cave. An old man with a white beard came over and gave him a pen: "This is a magic pen, use it well!" " " .
Second, the treasures of the Yuan Dynasty.
1368, the Yuan Dynasty perished and the Yuan Dynasty perished. But the whereabouts of these treasures from all over the country are unknown. With the rapid decline of Mongols, people found that this huge empire did not seem to leave many cultural relics. Experts believe that the treasures of the Yuan Dynasty did exist, and they were hidden in the imperial tombs of the emperors of the Yuan Dynasty. However, the records of the imperial tombs in the history books of the Yuan Dynasty are so vague that the location of the imperial tombs is nowhere to be found. This batch of the largest cultural relics in the history of China has become an unsolved historical mystery.
Third, the treasure of Li Zicheng
In A.D. 1644, Li Zicheng invaded Beijing, Emperor Chongzhen hanged himself, and the Ming Dynasty perished. Next, Li Zicheng, like many famous "nouveau riche" in history, ordered his men to search for treasure in Beijing, digging three feet and doing whatever it takes. The robbery lasted for more than 40 days. It is said that the treasure seized at that time was loaded with 6000 cars. According to literature, there are 70 million silver cars alone, not to mention countless gold and silver jewelry. Later, Li Zicheng left with this treasure. After the Qing army entered the customs, the whereabouts of this treasure are still unknown.
Fourth, Zhang's treasure
"Shi Niu's stone drum, gold and silver 150 thousand, whoever knows how to break it will buy it as a capital." This is a folk song that has been circulating in Sichuan for a long time. The content of folk songs involves a huge sum of money from Zhang, the leader of the peasant uprising army in the late Ming Dynasty. However, for more than 300 years, the whereabouts of this treasure have been unknown. Not long ago, the underwater archaeological discovery of Pengshan Estuary Ruined Silver Site covered an area of more than 20,000 square meters and more than 30,000 cultural relics, which confirmed the legend of "Zhanghekou Ruined Silver".
Verb (abbreviation for verb) abundant horn
The cornucopia is a treasure in ancient folklore in China. It is said that Shen Wansan became rich in his early days because he had a cornucopia. This allusion comes from Zhou's Collection of Different Lights: "At the beginning of the Ming Dynasty, when Shen Wansan was young, he saw a fisherman with more than 100 frogs, picked them up, bought them in an iron pot and raised them in a pond. Then the noise was so loud that I couldn't sleep. In the morning, I drove it away When I saw frogs surrounded by a earthen basin, I thought it was an instrument for washing hands. Three thousand wives left silver hairpin in the basin, and the silver hairpin was full and countless. The same is true of money and silver, so this is the wealth of the world. "