The Forbidden City in Beijing was built in the fifth year of Yongle (1404 ~ 1424) and in the fifteenth to eighteenth years of Yongle. The whole construction project was built by the Marquis of Chen Gui, with Wu Zhong as the planner. From the fifth year of Yongle in the Ming Dynasty (A.D. 1407), Ming Chengzu concentrated craftsmen throughout the country and recruited 200,000 to 300,000 migrant workers and military workers. 14 years later, this magnificent palace was built. After it was used in the Qing Dynasty, it was only partially rebuilt and rebuilt, and the overall layout remained basically unchanged.
The Forbidden City is located in the center of Beijing, the capital, with the central axis passing through the center of the imperial city, that is, through the three halls and three palaces of the Forbidden City. The main entrance of the Forbidden City is Nanwumen, also known as the "Five Peaks Pagoda". The Meridian Gate is the highest gate in Miyagi, and major ceremonies such as amnesty and offering prisoners are held at the Meridian Gate. Its north gate is Shenwumen, its east gate is Donghuamen, and its west gate is Xihuamen.
As a Miyagi in Ming and Qing Dynasties, the Forbidden City has two palaces, the outer court and the inner court. Located in front of the Forbidden City. The outer courtyard consists of the central axis consisting of Tiananmen-Duanmen-Wumen-Hall of Supreme Harmony-Zhonghe Hall-Baohe Hall, and the halls and corridors on both sides of the central axis. The outer court is dominated by three halls: Taihe, Zhonghe and Baohe, with Taihe Gate in front and Wenhua Hall and Wuying Hall on both sides. Judging from the function of the building, the foreign court is the place where the emperor handles government affairs and holds court meetings, and major national activities and ceremonies are held in the foreign court. The Forbidden City is the residence of the emperor's empress, including Gan Qing Palace, Jiaotai Palace, Kunning Palace, Royal Garden and six palaces on both sides. The Forbidden City is located in the back (north) of the Forbidden City, including Gan Qing Palace, Jiaotai Palace and Kunning Palace. This is where the queen lives. On both sides of this group of palaces, there are six palaces for living, Ningshou Palace and Cining Palace. And four royal gardens distributed throughout the palace. Miyagi also has a royal duty room and some service buildings, as well as a low room where eunuchs and maids live. It is located between the main entrance of Miyagi and Tiananmen Square, and the palace is built on both sides of Imperial Road. Outside the house, the ancestral temple is in the east and the national altar is in the west. Jingshan in the north of Miyagi is another group of buildings attached to the palace.
Taihe Gate Taihe Gate was built in the 18th year of Yongle. It's the south gate of the three halls facing the outside world. It was called "Fengtianmen" in the early Ming Dynasty and renamed "Taihe Gate" in the Qing Dynasty. It is located on the first floor of Sumitomo Stone Pavilion, which is three meters high. It is nine rooms wide, four rooms deep and 23.8 meters high. It is the tallest and largest door among the existing ancient buildings in China. Its roof is in the form of double eaves and hills. There are a pair of tall bronze lions in front of the door. On both sides of Taihe Gate are Zhaode Gate and Zhendu Gate. There are Concord, Xihe and Gate 2 in the courtyard. All the doors are connected, and there are special buildings in the northeast corner and northwest corner. All these doors, buildings and bedrooms are smaller in scale and volume than Taihe Gate, which makes Taihe Gate stand out in the whole square. After entering the Taihe Gate, it is a larger courtyard. It is still 200 meters wide from east to west and about 190 meters deep from north to south, which is enough to accommodate a guard of honor of 10,000 people. There are three halls in the Guangting: Taihe Hall, Zhonghe Hall and Baohe Hall (called Fengtian Hall, Gaihua Hall and Shenshen Hall in Ming Dynasty, renamed Huangji Hall, Zhongji Hall and Jianji Hall in Jiajing period).
Hall of Supreme Harmony
The Hall of Supreme Harmony, commonly known as the "Golden Hall", is the tallest building in Miyagi, Beijing in the Ming and Qing Dynasties, including the Sumitomo Building with three floors, with a height of 35.05 meters and a total height of 37.44 meters. Each floor is in the form of sumitomo, surrounded by Bai Yushi railings, with expected stigmas on it, broken heads below, and each stigmas is decorated. Its halls are eleven rooms wide and five rooms deep, with a building area of 2,377 square meters. It is also the largest wooden temple among the existing ancient buildings in China. The double eaves on the top of the temple, that is, the "four houses" of Yin Shang Dynasty, are "supreme". The number of horns and buckets jumping on the roof is also the largest; Sculptures on the imperial road and railings, colorful paintings in the hall, and patterns of algae wells all use the dragon and phoenix theme representing imperial power, and only here can the Japanese regulations, Jia Liang, bronze turtles and bronze cranes on the platform be displayed. The golden throne of the Qi Diao Dragon in the temple is a symbol of the autocratic imperial power. The Hall of Supreme Harmony is the place where the emperor held the enthronement ceremony, celebrated and received congratulations from civil and military officials. If a general is ordered to go to war, he will also be printed in the Hall of Supreme Harmony. In the Ming Dynasty, court examinations and New Year's Day banquets were also held in Taidian.
Central Harmony Hall
The Zhonghe Hall behind the Hall of Supreme Harmony is a building with a square plane, three rooms deep and three rooms wide, surrounded by a long corridor, covering an area of 580 square meters. The roof is a single-eave, pointed and gold-plated roof with bronze tires. It is the time for the emperor to rest and practice etiquette when he goes to the Hall of Supreme Harmony. Baohe Hall behind Zhonghe Hall is the place where the emperor holds a banquet for foreign princes and ministers every New Year's Eve. In the Qing dynasty, this was the place where court examinations were held.
Ganqingmen
The main entrance of the Forbidden City is called Gan Qing Gate. In front of it is a flat courtyard, commonly known as Hengjie. To the south of Hengjie is Baohe Hall, and to the north of Baohe Hall, you can get to Hengjie by walking down the three-story abutment, so this is the junction of the outer court and the inner court. Gan Qing Gate is located in the north of Hengjie, with the center facing south. It is a five-bay, single-eave roof built on the mountain, and there is a white stone platform under the roof. The specifications of Gan Qing Gate are slightly lower than Taihe Gate, the main entrance of the Three Halls. On both sides of the gate, there are eight-shaped shadow walls decorated with glass. This pair of screen walls is made of brick, with glazed eaves on the red wall and a glazed sumeru pedestal under it. The center and four corners of the wall are also decorated with glazed tiles.
Gan Qing Palace is the main hall of the last three palaces. During the Ming and early Qing Dynasties, Gan Qing Palace was always the bedroom of the emperor and queen. It is in front of the palace, 20 meters high, with a wide nine-bay, double-eaves roof and two small halls, Zhaoren Hall and Hongde Hall, which are connected with each other. The main hall between the two ends is a main hall, which can communicate with the Thai Hall and the Kunning Palace. In addition to the emperor's residence, he often summoned court officials here, read the throne, handled government affairs, and even met foreign envoys in the temple.
Gan Qing Palace is the main hall of the palace. There is a throne in the middle of the hall, and there is a "fair and square" plaque inside. There are warm pavilions at both ends. Gan Qing Palace is the bedroom of the feudal emperor. Before Kangxi in the Qing Dynasty, this was the place where the emperor lived and handled government affairs. After Yongzheng in the Qing Dynasty, the emperor moved to hall of mental cultivation, but he still read newspapers, played newspapers, appointed officials and summoned officials here.
Jiaotaidian
Jiaotai Hall is located between Gan Qing Palace and Kunning Palace, which means "harmony between heaven and earth, well-being and happiness". Built in the Ming Dynasty, it was rebuilt in the third year of Jiaqing in Qing Dynasty (AD 1798). It is a square temple with four corners, a gilded dome and dragons and phoenixes. During the Ming and Qing Dynasties, this hall was the place where the Queen's birthday celebration was held. The so-called queen's silkworm-kissing ceremony in Qing dynasty needs to check the preparations for the ceremony. There is also a collection of "Bao Xi" seals from the Qing Dynasty.
palace of earthly tranquility
Located in the north of Gan Qing Palace, Kunning Palace is also a big hall with nine rooms wide and double eaves. It was the main palace where the Empresses lived in the Ming and early Qing Dynasties. During the Shunye period of the Qing Dynasty, according to the customs and habits of Manchu, the Kunning Palace was transformed, which was mainly divided into two parts: the east and the west. A circular kang was added along the wall in the west, and a cauldron was put indoors. In the east of Kunning Palace, the emperor's wedding room was built, and the entrance was changed to the east. There are double-happiness palace lanterns, a double-happiness golden screen wall on a red background, a Zhang Longfeng bed on the north wall, and colorful gauze embroidered with the ancient philosophers hanging in front of the bed.
Yangxintang
Hall of mental cultivation, located in the west of the Palace, is an independent courtyard, 63 meters long from north to south and 80 meters wide from east to west, covering an area of 5,000 square meters. The front hall of hall of mental cultivation is three rooms wide and three rooms deep, and the main hall is seven rooms wide and three rooms deep. During the two hundred years from Yongzheng to the end of Qing Dynasty, the emperor lived here and carried out daily activities.
In the eastern and northern parts of the Forbidden City, there is a complete set of palace buildings, which are Ningshou Palace buildings. In the Ming dynasty, there was also a group of buildings here, but the scale was not very large; During the Qianlong period of the Qing Dynasty, after Emperor Qianlong announced his abdication, Ningshou Palace was built here as the emperor's retirement home. This is a very complete building complex, which is divided into two parts: the front palace and the back bedroom. The second half can be divided into three areas, the middle road is residential, the east road is entertainment and the west road is garden. The whole building complex is surrounded by high walls and becomes a fairly closed independent area.
Ningshougong
The main entrance of Ningshou Palace complex is the Imperial Gate, and there is a horizontal courtyard in front of it. There are Xiqin Gate and Jieqing Gate on the left and right sides, and there is a shadow wall opposite to the Imperial Gate on the south, forming a light bay in front of the door. Huangjimen is in the form of a stained glass wall with three doors hanging on the lotus column on the seventh floor. There are glazed tiles on the eaves of the three doors, buckets and beams under the eaves, rotating colored paintings made of colored glass on the beams, stone sumeru seats on the doors, and four water tanks in front of the doors. The whole gate is magnificent and solemn. In the south of Huangjimen, there is a glazed screen wall with nine dragons on it, commonly known as the Nine Dragons Wall.
Ningqingmen
When I entered the Imperial Gate, I came to the courtyard in front of Ningshou. The courtyard is very wide, surrounded by pine trees, to show the special use of the emperor's father. Ningqingmen is located in the center of the north of the courtyard. It has a broad five-bay, single-eave gable roof with a white base below. There are three steps in front of the pedestal. Zhongshi is the imperial road. The east and west sides of the gate are splayed with shadow walls, and there are two gilded bronze lions on the left and right sides. The whole gate is very similar in shape and scale to the Gan Qing Gate in the last three palaces.