An
ancient civilized nation and a great country
on the East Asian continent, China possesses a vast territory covering 9.6
million square kilometers, and a population accounting for over one-fifth of the
world's total, with 56 nationalities and a recorded history of 3,000 years,
during which it has created a unique, outstanding traditional Chinese Culture.
China's architectural art is a particularly beautiful branch in the tree of
Chinese civilization.
Generally speaking, there were about
seven main independent architectural systems in the ancient world, some of which
had long been interrupted, or had not been widely circulated. Therefore their
achievements and influence were relatively limited, such as ancient Egyptian,
West Asian, Indian and American structures. Only Chinese, European and Islamic
structures are considered to be the world's three major architectural systems.
The Chinese and European structures continued over the longest period of time
and spread over the widest area and therefore they gained more brilliant
achievements.
Traditional Chinese architecture is based
mainly on Han architecture, comprising roughly 15 types such as city, palace,
temple, mausoleum, monastery, Buddhist pagoda, grottoes, garden, government
office, folk public building, landscape, tower and pavilion, imperial palace,
residential house, great wall and bridge.
China's earliest prehistoric structures were
born at the juncture of the Old and New Stone Age about 10,000 years ago, when
primitive agriculture began to emerge and people's desire to settle in one place
began to become stronger. Structures (such as caves), which showed the earliest
initial demand for beauty, i.e., the artistic demand in its broad sense,
appeared in the middle and later parts of the New Stone Age around 4,000 years
BC.
In the long process of development,
China's architecture has consistently kept intact the basic character of the
system. In the Shang Dynasty (17th century-11th century BC), palaces and
mausoleums of large scale appeared. It is during the Western Zhou and Spring
& Autumn periods that cities came into being, and the appearance and wide
practice of tiles at that time was a great step forward in Chinese architectural
history. In terms of a structural system, traditional Chinese structures ended
in the early 20th century.
Chinese architecture has spread to the vast
East Asian region, including the countries of Korea, Japan, Viet Nam and
Mongolia, which combine to form the East Asian architecture centered on China.
During the Ming and Qing dynasties, China's architecture, particularly its
horticulture differed completely from the Western one. It began to become known
to Europe and exercised some influence. As far back as the Han and Jin
dynasties, Chinese architecture had accepted influences from South and Central
Asia, which had been merged into an organic part of Chinese architecture through
the long process of history.
Today, based on its traditional soil,
Chinese architecture has absorbed foreign architectural culture and continued to
forge ahead by complying with the requirements of our time and using new
architectural techniques. Over the past 10 to 20 years, in particular, Chinese
architecture, with the new period of reform and opening up as the turning point,
has stridden forward at a rapid pace and gained initial, gratifying
achievements.