No one knows specifically how many artisans built the Terracotta Army, because the workers were believed to be buried alive after its completion.
The Terracotta Army was part of Qin Shi Huan Di's tomb which is still yet to be completely uncovered to this day.
Qin Shi Huan Di's tomb took ~36 years and hundreds of thousands of workers to build. Again, no exact figures are possible because it is believed the entire hundreds of thousands strong workforce was all buried alive/killed after the tomb was completed.
There are many important general figures in the formation of the Terracotta Army. The supremo should be the emperor in the tomb nearby guarded by this army.
720,000 people
around 300 because there were so many terracotta warriors to uncover but eventually they only found about 700
hoe time
Yes the Terracotta army were painted but not many have paint any more as once they are exposed to fresh air the paint and lacquer will curl and fall off in just 15 seconds.
No they were not (many of the "peoples" heads have fallen off and/or are missing)
The Terracotta Army itself did not participate in battles; instead, it was created to accompany the first Emperor of China, Qin Shi Huang, in the afterlife. The army was intended to represent his military might and protect him in death, reflecting the emperor's belief in an eternal life. Therefore, there are no recorded victories or defeats associated with the Terracotta Army in actual battles.
There are several types of terracotta warriors, including infantry soldiers, generals, chariots, horses, and officers. Each type serves a different role in the overall terracotta army.
it took 90,000 workers to build it.
20,000 workers
The Terracotta Warriors vary in height. They are on average 1.84 metres tall. Amongst these statues, the shortest one is of height 1.75 metres. And there are many statues above 1.90 metres.
How to Build a Robot Army has 176 pages.