This is Hidden Brain.
I'm Shankar Vedanta.
In the 3rd century BC, China's first emperor, Qin Shi Huang, made a bold proclamation.
His dynasty would last 10,000 generations.
He launched an obsessive quest for immortality.
He ordered expeditions to the Eastern Sea,
demanded his subject's search for an elixir of life, and even welcomed mystics into his court.
His obsession came at a cost, putting him at odds with Confucian scholars at the time.
Historians have pieced together parts of Qin Shi Huang's story
from thousands of wooden strips unearthed in Hunan province.
The strips documented his correspondence.
These writings included responses from the emperor's minions,
who were too afraid to tell their boss what they really thought.
According to the BBC, the notes featured, quote, “.
Assorted awkward replies from regional governments who had failed to find the key to eternal life.”
Qin Shi Huang did achieve extraordinary things during his lifetime.
He unified China, standardized currency and measures,
built roads and canals, and linked fortresses into what became the Great Wall.
But he never found the key to immortality.
He died in 210 BC at the age of 49.