Cultural Characteristics
Deeply rooted in traditional Chinese culture, ancient Chinese
architecture boasts the following national cultural characteristics:
Readability
Ancient Chinese architecture, just like a silent cultural language, bears
rich cultural symbols that reveal Chinese beliefs in life and society. For
instance, houses belonging to people of higher social status will definitely
have different types of roofs
, steles, and couplets, compared with those of lower-status people.
Flexibility
Configurations and functions of ancient Chinese architecture, if necessary,
can be easily changed, and rooms within them are easy to be dismantled, rebuilt,
or shifted for other uses.
Introversion
Unlike many foreign buildings, which attach much importance to external
appearance, some Chinese ancient buildings are simple externally but enjoy
internal richness. Two typical examples are the Chinese Quadrangle (Siheyuan)
and Gardens in Suzhou
of East China's Jiangsu
Province .
Super-Stability
Ancient Chinese architecture has remained almost unchanged over thousands of
years thanks to China having enjoyed such a long history of feudal society in
which people embraced similar, if not the same, values and lifestyles.
When appraising ancient Chinese architecture, instead of jumping into mere
favorable or unfavorable comments, one should never neglect the fact that the
architecture have weathered the storms of time and survived till today.
Therefore, critics should be objective by taking historical situations into
consideration when making comments.
Interdependence
The most influential idea in Book of Changes (I-Ching) is that everything in
the world is interdependent and one can never learn anything without placing it
into a more general environment; architecture is no exception.
For instance, the reason why ancient Chinese buildings are made of wood
rather than stones lies in the Chinese belief that wood symbolizes spring,
green, and new life and therefore is used to build houses for the living.
Stones, however, are usually used for mausoleums and graves.
What's more, the Eight
Diagrams (Bagua
, relating to divination), the Yin-Yang Principle (concerning opposing
elements), and Feng Shui (dealing with attracting positive energy) all have
exerted great influences on ancient Chinese architecture.
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