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| A Panoramic View of the Hall of Supreme
Harmony |
The Forbidden City, now called the
Palace Museum, is located in the center of Beijing. Starting in 1420, the
Forbidden City was the home to 24 Chinese emperors during the Ming and Qing
dynasties (1368-1911). Now, it has developed into the Palace Museum, which displays
art treasures of the past dynasties and is the richest treasury of cultures and
arts in China. Lofty and magnificent, the Forbidden City is acclaimed to be one of
the world five great palaces, parallel with Palace of Versailles in France,
Buckingham Palace in Britain, White House in the United States and Kremlin in
Russia, and was listed by UNESCO as a World Cultural Heritage Site in
1987.
Extending 750 meters east-west and
960 meters north-south, The Forbidden City covers 720,000 square meters, and is
the largest palatial complex in the world and the most complete
ancient architectural group extant in China. It has 9,999 buildings, and is called
the Ocean of Palaces. Be it in terms of plain layout, three-dimensional effect
or magnificent appearance, the complex is really an unparalleled masterpiece in
the world. A central axis runs through the whole palace and the axis happens to
be on the central axis of Beijing City. The Forbidden City is divided into
southern and northern parts by the axis: The former served as the emperor's work
area and the latter as his living quarters. The main structures are arranged
along the central axis, and the buildings on both sides of it are
symmetrical.
The main structures in the work area that
cannot be missed are the Taihe Dian (the Hall of Supreme Harmony), Zhonghe Dian
(the Hall of Central Harmony) and Baohe Dian (the Hall of Preserved Harmony).
All the three main halls are built on an eight-meter-high platform covering a
total area of about 85,000 square meters. The Taihe Dian is the largest and most
imposing hall. It is 60.1 meters wide, 33.33 meters deep and 35.05 meters high.
Here the most important ceremonies of the feudal dynasties were held, such as
the emperor's enthronement, his marriage and his conferring of titles and
issuing orders on expeditions. On these occasions, thousands of people chanted
"long life, long life, and long, long life" to his majesty, and hundreds of
musical instruments and bells and drums sounded in unison. Behind the Taihe Dian
is the Zhonghe Dian, where the emperor used to rest and receive officials before
attending major ceremonies. The northernmost structure is the Baohe Dian, in
which the emperor threw banquets and interviewed successful candidates for
imperial examinations.
The living quarters include the Qianqing,
Jiaotai and Kunning halls and the six lesser halls on the east and west sides,
which together are called "three main halls and six lesser halls", where the
emperor and his concubines lived. North of the living quarters is a small but
exquisite imperial garden. In the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) and at the beginning
of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), all the emperors lived in the Qianqing Gong
(the Palace of Heavenly Purity), while empresses lived in the Kunning Gong (the
Palace of Earthly Tranquility). The Jiaotai Dian (the Hall of Union) was a place
for the activities of the empresses. But in the middle and late periods of the
Qing Dynasty, the emperors and empresses all moved to the six lesser halls on
the west side. The most famous is the Yangxin Dian (the Hall of Mind
Cultivation). It became the place where most Qing emperors, starting from
Emperor Yongzheng, lived and handled state affairs. It is also the place where
Empress Dowager Cixi attended to state affairs behind the scenes for as long as
40 years.
The whole complex is tightly guarded by two
defense lines. One is the moat, which is 52 meters wide and six meters deep,
surrounding the city wall; and the other is the city wall, which is 3,400 meters
long, 10 meters high and 8.62 meters wide at the bottom. There are four gates:
Wumen Gate to the south, Shenwu Gate to the north, Donghua Gate to the east and
Xihua Gate to the west. On the four corners stand four turret towers, each with
three layers of eaves and 72 ridges. They are masterpieces of the ancient
architectural art.
Some halls in the Palace Museum have
developed into the Hall of Historical Arts, the Hall of Jewelry, the Hall of
Watches and Clocks, the Hall of Paintings, the Hall of Potteries, the Hall of
Toys and so on. The museum has a collection of 1,052,653 pieces of ancient art
treasures, accounting for one sixth of the total cultural relics in China. It is
the museum with the richest collection of cultural relics in China, and also a
world-famous museum of ancient cultural arts. Many cultural relics preserved in
it are unique in the world.