Genghis Khan's Mausoleum Keeper - the most loyal tribe in the world, the Darhu
In the town of Yijin Huoluo in Ordos, Inner Mongolia, a team of soldiers and important ministers of the dynasty who originally guarded the tomb of the late king for 780 years has been guarding the soul of the late king. This king is Genghis Khan, the "pride of the generation". This team is known as the "Dalmut" (Chinese meaning "Bearer of the Divine Mission").
In 1227 A.D., Genghis Khan died of illness at the foot of Liupan Mountain on his way to the west. According to his secret will, the body was immediately buried in secret, and the burial site is still a fog. When Genghis Khan was dying, the guards by his side followed the traditional custom of taking a lock of fluff from the forehead of the white camel and putting it on his mouth, absorbing his last breath and leaving his soul. Along with the portrait of Genghis Khan and some relics, the velvet was placed in a white tent for worship, and since then, this white tent has become a symbol of Genghis Khan's "god of worship". Later, with the death of the four wives of Genghis Khan, the number of sacred objects enshrined gradually increased, and the number of white palace tents also increased. During the Yuan Dynasty, Kublai Khan built a temple to worship Genghis Khan and other ancestors in the capital of the Yuan Dynasty, and set the temple as eight rooms, and at the same time in Shangdu (now the north bank of the Lightning River of the Blue Banner in Inner Mongolia) also established eight palace tents to worship Genghis Khan, known as the "Eight White Palaces" in history, also called "Eight White Rooms". The relics of Genghis Khan and his wife were placed separately in eight palace tents, and each was enshrined independently, and the mausoleum of Genghis Khan began to take shape.
From the day of Genghis Khan's return, an elite army was selected from among the most loyal generals and their descendants who had distinguished themselves in battle, and took on the mission of protecting and paying tribute to the "god of worship". The team has grown from more than 1,000 people to nearly 6,000 people from more than 1,700 households......