Amid turmoil, a group of seemingly vulnerable scholars and museum staff bore the heaviest responsibility: safeguarding the very lifeblood of Chinese civilization. In 1933, 13,427 crates of artifacts from the Palace Museum embarked on a journey through the fires of conflict. Traversing three separate routes across 10,000 km of mountains and rivers, braving storms for fourteen years, the treasures ultimately returned intact—a true miracle. This was not merely a rescue of cultural heritage but an epic of faith and duty, driven by an unshakable conviction: as long as culture survives, so does the nation.
This monumental relocation—hailed as the largest, longest, and most extensive movement of cultural treasures in human history—belongs not only to China but is forever etched into the annals of human civilization.
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