The Zhongjing City Site of Liao is located
in the alluvial plain on the north bank of the Laoha River in Daming City of
Ningcheng County in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region.
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| Daming Temple |
As one of the five
capitals of the Liao Dynasty (916-1125), Zhongjing City was built from the
21st year (1003) to the 25th year of the Tonghe reign.
With a Dadingfu (a government office) set up in the city, it was a place where
emperors of Liao received envoys from the Song Dynasty (960-1279). After the
Liao Dynasty was conquered, the Jin Dynasty (1115-1234) changed the name of the
city into Beijinglu Dadingfu, which was then changed into Daninglu in the Yuan
Dynasty. A sentry post was established in the early Ming Dynasty (1368-1644),
and then dismantled and abandoned in the first year (1403) of the Yongle reign.
Regional excavation team of Inner Mongolia carried out a series of
archaeological excavations on the site during 1956-1960.
The city planning of Zhongjing City of Liao
imitated that of Bianjing City of the Northern Song Dynasty (960-1127), with
three rings of cities, namely the outer city, the inner city and the imperial
palace. Taking a rectangular shape, the outer city was 4,200 meters long from
east to west, and 3,500 meters wide from south to north. A gate was open in the
center of the south wall, with a small defensive town built outside the gate
that had a turret in each of the four corners. From the south gate of the outer
city, the Zhuxia Gate, to the south gate of the inner city, the Yangde Gate, the
whole distance was about 1,400 meters, with a 64-meter-wide street lying in the
center. On both sides of the street, two drains covered with wooden boards led
to the stone culverts cut at the foot of the city wall on both sides of the
Zhuxia Gate. A saddle-shaped mount protruded in the center of the street, about
500 meters to the Zhuxia Gate. It is believed that this mount is the remnant of
a building. Along both sides of the central street were symmetrically
distributed streets, of which 6 stretching from south to north and 10 from east
to west, all about 4-15 meters wide. These streets cut the city into lanes where
lived the Han people.
To the north of the outer city were sites of
temples, posthouses and official bureaus. On the hillside in the northwest of
the city scattered a number of temple sites. A multi-eave brick pagoda was built
in the northeast corner of the south city, near the south wall of the inner
city. Legend has it that it was a dagoba built in the Gansheng Temple, now known
as Daming Temple, inside the Zhongjing City during the reign years of Emperor
Zhongzong of Liao. Built on a 6-meter-high base, the octangular pagoda was 74
meters high with 13 floors. Seen from outside of the first layer, the front four
sides of the pagoda were carved with figures of Buddha, Bodhisattva, Hercules
and Flying Apsaras while the back four sides were divided into double layers,
with the upper layer carved with the name of this pagoda and the lower layer
with the name of the Bodhisattva. It was built with a simple and vigorous style
that made it a masterpiece among architectures of the Liao Dynasty. To its
southwest was another pagoda of 24 meters high, which known as Small Pagoda.
Also an octagonal pagoda with 13 floors, it was believed to be built during the
late Liao Dynasty or Jin Dynasty.
The inner city was built in the center of
the outer city, a little to the north side. Taking a rectangular shape, the city
was 2,000 meters long from east to west, and 1,500 meters wide from south to
north. Inside the city was mainly open land. A 40-meter-wide street stretched
from the Yangde Gate open in the center of the south wall to the Changhe Gate,
the south gate of the imperial palace. About 85 meters south to the Changhe
Gate, the street connected with a 15-meter-wide street stretching from east to
west whose two ends turned north into the imperial palace.
The palace was built in the center of the
north part of the inner city. The palace had a square shape, with each side
about 1000 meters long. Taking the north wall of the inner city as its north
wall, the palace had its own east, south and west walls. Watchtowers built at
the south ends of the east and west walls still exist, while the sites of the
south wall and the Changhe Gate cannot be found anymore. Two 15-meter-wide
openings, believed to be the sites of side gates, were discovered 180 meters to
the east and west sides of the Changhe Gate. Each gate had an 8-meter-wide
street linking with the palace. On the axis line to the north of the Changhe
Gate was a large-scale palace site. Inside both side gates were two hall
sites.