Why does every brick in Nanjing's Ming wall carry a person's name?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Quality control: a failed brick traces to a specific person
Quality control: a failed brick traces to a specific person ✓ — Correct! Each of the ~350 million bricks was stamped with up to 11 levels of names: the worker who made it, the kiln foreman, the supervisor, the county official, the prefecture official. If a brick failed inspection, blame ran up the chain. Called 物勒工名 ('the materials carry the craftsman's name'), it's essentially industrial supplier traceability — 600 years before ISO 9001.
Workers signed bricks out of pride in their craft — Wrong. Pride wouldn't require also stamping the supervisor's and prefecture official's names. The system was top-down accountability, not bottom-up signature. Workers had no choice; the official was held responsible too.
It honors workmen who died building the wall — Wrong. The bricks were quality-control records, not memorials. Workers who died building the wall were not commemorated — that's a Great Wall folk legend, not Ming-era practice. The names belong to the living chain of accountability.
More History & Culture questions
- Why was the 1873 blue-jeans patent not simply a patent for denim fabric?
- Why could one vague Backrooms photo grow more lore than a finished monster story?
- Why did camera-like Backrooms clips make an impossible maze easier to believe?
- Chinese city gates had a 2nd inner trap-courtyard. Why?
- Why are old castle walls topped with zigzag battlements?
- Why did cannons shatter European walls but barely dent Chinese ones?
