The Tomb of Yang Guifei, the seventh emperor of the Tang Dynasty, is the tomb of Yang Yuhuan, the favorite concubine of Li Longji, Emperor Xuanzong of the Tang Dynasty. It has been more than 1200 years since then. It is located in Maweipo, 63 kilometers west of Xi'an. It is famous at home and abroad for its unique charm of "preserving incense in ancient graves, and shining in poetry tablets". Yang Guifei's cemetery is small and exquisite. It covers an area of 3000 square meters. On the front of the entrance, there are three ancient-style Memorial halls. Through the memorial hall, there are tombs, covering an area of about one acre and about three meters high. The tombs are covered with green bricks. There are corridors on the east, West and north sides of the tomb, with stone tablets of varying sizes, and carved travel notes and inscriptions of historical celebrities. The death of Yang Guifei broke out in the fourteenth year of Emperor Xuanzong's Tianbao in Tang Dynasty. The following year, when Xuanzong fled West to Maweipo, he accompanied the three armies and guarded them. Please chop off Yang Yuhuan, the noble concubine. Emperor Xuanzong of the Tang Dynasty had no choice but to give his concubines the chance to hang themselves and perform a tragedy that shocked the whole world. In recent years, however, there has been another saying that Maweiyi was a maid when she was strangled to death. Chen Xuanli, the general of the Imperial Army, was attracted by the beauty of the noble concubines. He couldn't bear to kill them, so he conspired with Gaoli Shishi and replaced them with maids. Yang Guifei fled south escorted by Chen Xuanli's close relatives. She sailed out to sea around today's Shanghai. After drifting on the sea, she traveled to Japan for a long time, and eventually spent her old age in Japan. However, it is still difficult to understand the circumstances of his death.