Screen Walls
Green Screen
Walls
The screen
wall, called yingbi or zhaobi in Chinese, can be made of any kind of
material -- brick, wood, stone or glazed tile. It is a kind of isolated wall,
located either outside or just inside the gate of a traditional Chinese home
used to shield the inner quarters.
The yingbi dates back at least to the Western Zhou
Dynasty (11th century BC-771BC). Archaeologists have discovered the remains
of a screen wall in recent years in tombs from the period in Shaanxi
Province. The wall measures 240 cm in length and is 20 cm high. This is the
earliest known wall of its kind in China at the time of writing.
In ancient times, the yingbi was a symbol of rank. According to the Western
Zhou system of rites, only royal palaces, noblemen's mansions and religious temples
had screen walls. Apart from keeping passersby from peeping into the courtyard,
the screen wall was also used by a visitor to tidy up his dress before going in.
It was not until much later that private houses (mainly bungalow quadrangles in
northern parts of the country) began to have screen walls.
the nine dragon wall in Shanxi Province
The most exquisite of all ancient screen walls are the three "nine-dragon
walls" constructed of glazed colored tiles. The largest of these, 45.5m by 8m by
2.02m, is now in Datong,
Shanxi
Province. It originally stood in front of the princely mansion of the 13th
son of Zhu
Yuanzhang, the first emperor of the Ming
Dynasty (1368-1644). Sculpted in seven different colors are nine dragons in
the clouds. The most splendid of the three is the one belonging to a palace of
the Ming Dynasty, which now stands north of the lake in Beijing's
Beihai
Park. It is a mosaic of glazed colored tiles displaying a relief of nine
coiled dragons on each side. One can count the 635 smaller dragons along the
ridges and roof
tiles of the wall. The third wall stands opposite of the Huangjimen Gate in the
Forbidden
City; it is very well known to sightseers. All
of the three walls were built during the Ming Dynasty and used to stand in front
of the entrance to a courtyard - becoming an integral part of the architectural
complex and adding to the magnificence of the buildings.
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