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2008 Summer
Games > Summer Games Attractions
The Forbidden City - (courtesy
of TravelChinaGuide.com)
Lying at the center of Beijing, the Forbidden City, called Gu
Gong in Chinese, was the imperial palace during the Ming and Qing dynasties. Now
known as the Palace Museum, it is to the north of Tiananmen Square. This
is a must see attraction for every traveler heading to the 2008
Summer Games. Rectangular in shape, it is the world's largest palace
complex and covers 74 hectares. Surrounded by a six meter deep moat and a ten
meter high wall are 9,999 buildings. The wall has a gate on each side. There are
unique and delicately structured towers on each of the four corners of the
curtain wall. These afford views over both the palace and the city outside. The
Forbidden City is divided into two parts. The southern section, or the Outer
Court was where the emperor exercised his supreme power over the nation. The
northern section, or the Inner Court was where he lived with his royal family.
Until 1924 when the last emperor of China was driven from the Inner Court,
fourteen emperors of the Ming dynasty and ten emperors of the Qing dynasty had
reigned here. Having been the imperial palace for some five centuries, it houses
numerous rare treasures and curiosities. Listed by UNESCO as a World Cultural
Heritage Site in 1987, the Palace Museum is now one of the most popular tourist
attractions world-wide.
Construction
of the palace complex began in 1407, the 5th year of the Yongle reign of the
third emperor of the Ming dynasty. It was completed fourteen years later in
1420. It was said that a million workers including one hundred thousand artisans
were driven into the long-term hard labor. Stone needed was quarried from
Fangshan, a suburb of Beijing. It was said a well was dug every fifty meters
along the road in order to pour water onto the road in winter to slide huge
stones on ice into the city. Huge amounts of timber and other materials were
freighted from faraway provinces. Ancient Chinese people displayed their very
considerable skills in building the Forbidden City. Take the grand red city wall
for example. It has an 8.6 meters wide base reducing to 6.66 meters wide at the
top. The angular shape of the wall totally frustrates attempts to climb it. The
bricks were made from white lime and glutinous rice while the cement is made
from glutinous rice and egg whites. These incredible materials make the wall
extraordinarily strong.
Since
yellow is the symbol of the royal family, it is the dominant color in the
Forbidden City. Roofs are built with yellow glazed tiles; decorations in the
palace are painted yellow; even the bricks on the ground are made yellow by a
special process. However, there is one exception. Wenyuange, the royal library,
has a black roof. The reason is that it was believed black represented water
then and could extinguish fire.
Nowadays, the Forbidden City, or the Palace Museum is open to
tourists from home and abroad. Splendid painted decoration on these royal
architectural wonders, the grand and deluxe halls, with their surprisingly
magnificent treasures will certainly satisfy 'modern civilians'.
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