A palace was a structure of the utmost
maturity, highest accomplishment and largest scale in China's development, clearly reflecting the
characteristics of traditional Chinese culture which stressed a stable social
and political order. A palace was the place where the emperor met his ministers
and lived. In addition to meeting the emperor's material living demands, it
provided strong spiritual influence to the people and prominence to the
emperor's authority mainly through its solemn and magnificent majesty, its grand
scale and compact spatial pattern.
To achieve this, ancient Chinese
architects adopted three kinds of architectural artistic techniques: first was
showing the (volume and quantitative) difference of architecture: the more
respectable structure, the greater its volume and the quantity of single
structures that form this building complex; the second was that the axial
symmetric method was stressed in the layout of the complex; the third was
expanding the axial symmetric layout to all capital cities, further setting off
the importance of the palace. Therefore, there was an inseparably close
relationship between China's
palaces and capital cities. Their development represented the process of
continuous enrichment and perfection of the above-mentioned concepts.
There were several famous palaces during the
Qin and Han dynasties (221BC-220AD), such as the Epang Palace in Xianyang of the Qin Dynasty, the
Weiyang Palace and Jianzhang Palace in Chang'an of the Han Dynasty. This
marked the first upsurge in palatial construction, but due to remote antiquity
details are not very clear.
The second upsurge was set off during the
Sui and Tang dynasties (581-907), such as the Daming Palace of the Tang Dynasty, and the perfectly
preserved Forbidden City of the
Ming and Qing dynasties (1368-1911).