Its Fiona Fang is four inches long, and it has five dragons in New Zealand. On the front, the eight characters inscribed by Li Si, "I am a destiny, so I can live forever", are engraved as tokens of "imperial power is endowed by heaven, orthodox and legal".
After the Qin dynasty, emperors of all dynasties took this seal as a symbol and regarded it as a treasure and a heavy weapon of the country. If you get it, it means that you are "destined to return". If you lose it, it means that your luck has run out. Anyone who ascended the throne without this seal was ridiculed as "Bai Di" and despised by the world as unconfident.
People who wanted to seek the position of emperor in the past dynasties fought for power and profit, which led to the frequent change of the national seal. It has been in Chixian County, China for more than two thousand years, flickering and finally disappearing, which makes people sigh that there is no trace so far.
"In the nineteenth year of the King of Qin (the first 228 years), Qin defeated Zhao, and the world was one. After the unification of the world, Ying Zheng appointed himself as the first emperor, and ordered Lisi to carve the country's imperial seal with a small seal. The front is engraved with the Chinese character "I was ordered to live forever in heaven", and there are three sharp wavy lines (representing the sea) on the bottom of the ring, and wires on both sides (the inner line is thinner and the outer line is thicker). The moral of the whole design of the national decree is: Rizhao Sea is now a double dragon. This imperial seal is a symbol of the orthodox emperor of China.