No, there isn't a figure made to represent Qin Shihuang in the Terracotta Army. It's reasonable that the emperor shouldn't be include in his honor guards. He is resting in his "underground palace" to the west of the place terracotta warriors buried.
The terracotta warriors were made to protect the emperor in the after life, as for why are they buried I have no idea.
The best terracotta worrior is the general,
The emperor who wanted the Terracotta Warriors was Qin Emperor Shi Huangdi.
The Terracotta Warriors were built to protect an ancient Chinese emperor's tomb and his journey in the afterlife. They are in China. Each Warrior is different and has its own armour and weapons. There are even horses and chariots in this army.
They aren't fighting anyone. They were buried with Emperor Qin to help him control his empire in the afterlife. They were a replica of his real army and were to stand guard and protect him from all his enemies.
Those terracotta warriors were made in order to protect the emperor Qin Shi Huang once he was dead, he wanted to be buried with his own army.
The man that ordered the terracotta army would have been Emperor Qin Shi Huang. This would be because the emperor had absolute monarch which means that he made all the final decisions.
They were an army of clay statues made for an Asian emperor to protect him in the afterlife I think
They were built in the reign of Qin Shi-huang (秦始皇), the first emperor of Qin Dynasty. Shihuang means the first emperor, and Qin is the name of the dynasty. This emperor thought he was so great that he called himself the first emperor. And the terracotta warriors were made for him.
they were there to protect the emperor and the emperor was very important
They were made for the emperor's mausoleum during the Qin Dynasty under the rule of Qin Shi Huangdi. The first emperor of China.
It is only known that the height of the tallest Terracotta Warrior excavated is 1.97 metres (6 feet and 5.5 inches), but its other information is remained unclear.