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Beijing - Culture |
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The Palace In Chinese the Forbidden City is called Purple Forbidden City. "Purple" doesn't refer to the color of the buildings or walls, but has a mythological origin. It is said that the Emperor of Heaven has his palaces in the region of the North Star, of which purple is the symbolic color. The abode of the temporal emperor, therefore, is supposed to have the same color. The Purple Forbidden City was inaccessible to the common people. Even the highest civil and military officers could not enter it without good reason. The Forbidden City was completed in 1420 during the Ming Dynasty. It was the home of 24 emperors of the Ming and Ching dynasties. Naturally it was the scene of many important events affecting the course of Chinese history, including political struggles and palace coups, some of them extremely tragic. After the republican revolution of 1911, the last emperor of the Ching Dynasty, then still a child, abdicated the next year. But he and his family and their entire entourage were allowed to stay in the palaces. They were finally expelled by republican troops in 1924. The Forbidden City was renamed as the Palace Museum and opened to the general public. The Gardens In addition to the Imperial Garden at the back of the Forbidden City, the gardens for enjoyment by the royal family included the Prospect Hill, once also known as His Majesty's Hill, the Beihai (North Sea), the Zhongnanhai (Central Sea and South Sea), the Garden of Good Health and Harmony, better know as the Summer Palace, the Yuanmingyuan (Garden of Perfect Splendor) which was burn down by the allied forces of Great Britain and France during their invasion of Beijing in 1860, and the Enjoy-the-Spring Garden which also lies in ruins. All the well-preserved ones have become parks today. The Beijing Zoo used to be a garden owned by a prince of the Ching Dynasty and later became a royal garden. The Fragrant Hills Park was first named the Garden of Congenial Tranquility as one of the five gardens of the Ching Dynasty, the other four being the Garden of Light and Tranquility, the Garden of Perfect Splendor, the Enjoy-the-Spring Garden and the Summer Palace (originally the Garden of Clear Ripples). The Great Wall Construction of the Great Wall started in the 7th century B.C. The vassal states under the Chou Dynasty in the northern parts of the country each built their own walls for defence purposes. After the state of Chin unified China in 221 B.C., it joined the walls to hold off the invaders from the Tsongnoo tribes in the north and extended them to more than 10,000 li or 5,000 kilometers. This is the origin of the name of the 10,000-li Great Wall. The Great Wall was renovated from time to time after the Chin Dynasty. A major renovation started with the founding of the Ming Dynasty in 1368, and took 200 years to complete. The wall we see today is almost exactly the result of this effort. With a total length of over 6,000 kilometers, it extends to the Jiayu Pass in Gansu Province in the west and to the mouth of the Yalu River in Liaoning Province in the east.
Painting, Kung-Fu scene |
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