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2006-11-14 11:21:57 · 7 answers · asked by mrdgal04 2 in Education & Reference Trivia

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Beijing, China, containing the imperial court of former Chinese rulers. The city was forbidden to ordinary people under the former Emperor of China

2006-11-14 11:25:46 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

it was forbidden because the chinese royal family lived there and the only people that could enter was the royal family, relatives of the royal family, and people working in for the royal family. once you enter the forbidden city, you rarely come out and sometimes NEVER come out. the royal family was only allowed to come out of the forbidden city if it was something important. ex: when the emperor had to go to a pilgrimage. today, the forbidden city is a museum but not all parts of the forbidden city is open to the public. ps. the forbidden city is like a city behind walls.

2006-11-14 12:27:43 · answer #2 · answered by xxazaleanne 3 · 0 0

Watch the movie, The final Emperor. this would help you. The Forbidden city, properties all the Imperial court participants, Empress and the Concubines, Eunuchs. The Forbidden city's shape by potential of the Ming Dynasty virtually cripple the complete kingdom. Allot of farmers are forced to paintings for its shape and it are transforming into too costly for the fee variety to bear. background Channel have a teach approximately Forbidden Kingdom, attempt to seem for it too. The cost replaced into too super that persons began to insurrection through fact they have not any money to spend nor foodstuff to consume at that component. The Emperor at that component isn't chinese language yet Manchurian which additionally a factor for locals to hate the ruling type. Google on the project you will hit extra useful outcomes.

2016-12-10 09:19:17 · answer #3 · answered by unck 4 · 0 0

It was forbidden because it was only allowed for the Imperial family (Emperor, princesses, princes, concubines, emperor's mother, main wife), government officials, servants, and certain people who were permitted to go in by the emperor or one of the more privileged officials. Normal citizens were not allowed in.

2006-11-16 13:59:19 · answer #4 · answered by Doodle 3 · 0 0

It is where the royal family lived. It was off limits to anyone other than them, and government officials.

2006-11-14 11:24:09 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It was the only place that had take out. Everywhere else you had to sit down so they didn't want a run on the place.

2006-11-14 11:24:04 · answer #6 · answered by vanamont7 7 · 0 1

Forbidden City
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Coordinates: 39°54′56″N, 116°23′27″E

Overview of the Forbidden CityThis article is about The Chinese imperial palace in Beijing. For other uses of the term "Forbidden City", see Forbidden City (disambiguation).
The Forbidden City (Chinese: 紫禁城; pinyin: Zǐjinchéng; literally "Purple Forbidden City") was the Chinese imperial palace during the mid-Ming and the Qing Dynasties. The Forbidden City is located in the middle of Beijing, China. It is now known as the Palace Museum.

Its extensive grounds cover 720,000 square meters. The Forbidden City has 800 buildings with more than 8,000 rooms.

The Forbidden City is listed by UNESCO as the largest collection of preserved ancient wooden structures in the world. The Forbidden City was declared a World Heritage Site in 1987 as the "Imperial Palace of the Ming and Qing Dynasties."

The Palace Museum in the Forbidden City should not be confused with the National Palace Museum in Taiwan. Both museums derive from the same institution, but they were split after the Chinese Civil War.

Contents [hide]
1 Names
2 Description
2.1 Rooms
2.2 Walls
2.3 Sections
2.4 Gardens
2.5 Symbols
2.6 Major Buildings
3 History
3.1 Construction
3.2 Ming and Qing dynasty
3.3 After the revolution
4 Image gallery
5 Influences of the Forbidden City
6 Reference
7 See also
8 External links



[edit] Names
The Forbidden City is known by many names. The name by which the site is most commonly known in English, "The Forbidden City," is a translation of the Chinese name Zijin Cheng (紫禁城), which literally means "Purple Forbidden City." It is also known as the "Forbidden Palace" in English.

Today, the site is most commonly known as Gugong (故宫) in Chinese, which means the "Former Palace."[1] The museum which is located in these buildings is known as the "Palace Museum" (Chinese: 故宫博物院; pinyin: Gùgōng Bówùyùan).

In the Manchu language it is called Dabkūri dorgi hoton, which literally means the "Layered Inner City."


[edit] Description

The imperial throne inside the Palace of Heavenly Purity (乾清宮), the place of day-to-day government and imperial audiencesThe Imperial Palace Grounds are located directly to the north of Tiananmen Square and are accessible from the square via Tiananmen Gate. It is surrounded by a large area called the Imperial City.

Rectangular in shape, the Forbidden City is the world's largest palace complex and covers 720,000 square meters (178 acres, or 0.28 square miles). It is surrounded by a six meter deep moat and a ten meter high wall. The Forbidden City includes five halls, seventeen palaces, and numerous other buildings.


[edit] Rooms
The Forbidden Palace is reputed to have a total of 9,999.5 rooms. However, according to surveying by the Palace Museum, there are about 8,600 existing rooms.

The majority of buildings in the Forbidden City have an odd number of rooms, distributed symmetrically about an axis. However, the Imperial Library (文渊阁) had six rooms as a charm against fire, because the number six is associated with water in Chinese astrology. To prevent that building from looking out of place, the sixth room was built very small. This sixth room is what is designated as the "half-room."


[edit] Walls
The wall around the Forbidden City has a gate on each side. At the southern end is the Meridian Gate[2] To the north is the Gate of Divine Might, which faces Jingshan Park. The distance between these two gates is 960 meters, while the distance between the gates in the east and west walls is 750 meters. The walls are thick and squat and were specifically designed to withstand attacks by cannons.

There are unique and delicately structured towers on each of the four corners of the surrounding wall. These towers afford views over both the palace and the city outside.


[edit] Sections
The Forbidden City is divided into two parts. The Outer Court, which includes the southern and central sections, centres on three halls which were used for ceremonial purposes, such as coronations, investitures, and imperial weddings. The three halls include the magnificent Hall of Supreme Harmony (太和殿), itself fronted by the Gate of Supreme Harmony (太和門). Apart from ceremony, the Outer Court also houses the Imperial Library, archives, and lantern storage. The Inner Court includes the northern, eastern, and western parts of the Forbidden City, and centres on another three halls which were used for the day-to-day affairs of state. The most important among these is the Palace of Heavenly Purity (乾清宫). The Inner Court was where the Emperor worked and lived with his family, eunuchs and maid-servants.

Outside the main gate to the Forbidden City, the Meridian Gate faces a square where imperial corporal punishments were sometimes carried out. To the south of that square stands Tiananmen Gate.


Inside the Forbidden City
[edit] Gardens
At the northern end of the Forbidden City is the imperial garden. It is home to some relatively old trees, most between 100 and 300 years of age.

The Forbidden City is surrounded by royal gardens. To the west lies Zhongnanhai, the complex of buildings centred on two lakes which serves as the central headquarters for the Communist Party of China. To the north-west lies Beihai Park, which also centres on a lake and is a popular park. To the north lies Jingshan Park, also known as Jing Shan or Coal Hill, where the last Ming emperor hanged himself as the rebel army overran his palace.


[edit] Symbols
The individual buildings within the Forbidden City housed many important members of the Chinese aristocracy. The famous national civil service exams were given inside one of these buildings. The royal color was yellow, and that color dominates the rooftops. On each corner of the roofs, there are small statuettes, the number of which designated the power of the person living within the building. The number 9 was reserved for the emperor. Only one building has 10 statuettes at each corner.

Today, Tiananmen Gate in front of the Forbidden City is decorated with a portrait of Mao Zedong in the center and two placards to the left and right. The left placard reads "中华人民共和国万岁"(Traditional Chinese: 中華人民共和國萬歲; pinyin: zhōnghuá rénmín gònghéguó wànsuì; "Long Live the People's Republic of China"), while the right placard reads "世界人民大团结万岁"(Traditional Chinese: 世界人民大團結萬歲; pinyin: shìjiè rénmín dà tuánjié wànsuì; "Long live the Great Unity of the World's Peoples"). The phrasing has great symbolic meaning, as the phrase "long live" was traditionally reserved for the Emperors of China, but is now available to the common people. This is also true of the Forbidden City palace itself.


[edit] Major Buildings
Major buildings include:

Meridian Gate
Tiananmen Gate
Gate of Supreme Harmony
Gate of Divine Might
Hall of Supreme Harmony
Palace of Heavenly Purity

[edit] History

The Hall of Supreme Harmony (太和殿) at the centre of the Forbidden City
[edit] Construction
The site where the Forbidden City stands today was part of the imperial city during the Yuan dynasty. When the Ming Dynasty succeeded it, the first Hongwu Emperor moved the capital to Nanjing and ordered that the Mongol palaces be razed in 1369. His son, Zhu Di, was created Prince of Yan with seat in Beijing. A princely palace was built on the site. In 1402, Zhu Di usurped the throne and became the Yongle Emperor. He moved the capital back to Beijing.

The construction of the Forbidden City started in 1406 and took 14 years and an estimated 200,000 men. The principal axis of the new palace sits to the east of the Yuan Dynasty palace, a design intended to place the Yuan palace in the western or "kill" position in fengshui. Soil excavated during construction of the moat was piled up to the north of the palace to create an artificial hill, the Jingshan hill.


[edit] Ming and Qing dynasty
From its 1420 completion to 1644, when a peasant revolt led by Li Zicheng invaded it, the Forbidden City served as the seat of the Ming Dynasty. The following Qing Dynasty also occupied the Forbidden City. In 1860, during the Second Opium War, British forces managed to penetrate to the heart of the Forbidden City and occupied it until the end of the war, being the only foreign power to do so.

After being the home of 24 emperors—fourteen of the Ming Dynasty and ten of the Qing Dynasty—the Forbidden City ceased being the political center of China in 1912 with the abdication of Puyi, the last Emperor of China. Under an agreement signed between the Qing imperial house and the new Republic of China government, Puyi was, however, allowed and, in fact, required to live within the walls of the Forbidden City. Puyi and his family retained the use of the Inner Court, while the Outer Court was handed over to the Republican authorities.


[edit] After the revolution
Puyi stayed in the Forbidden City until 1924, when Feng Yuxiang took control of Beijing in a coup. Denouncing the previous agreement with the Qing imperial house, Feng expelled Puyi. Soon after, the Palace Museum was established in the Forbidden City. Having been the imperial palace for some five centuries, the Forbidden City houses numerous rare treasures and curiosities. These were gradually catalogued and put on public display.

However, with the Japanese invasion of China, the safety of these national treasures were cast in doubt, and they were moved out of the Forbidden City. In 1947, after they had been moved from one location to another inside mainland China for many years, Chiang Kai-shek ordered many of the artifacts from the Forbidden City and the National Museum in Nanjing to be moved to Taiwan. These artifacts formed the core of the National Palace Museum in Taipei.


[edit] Image gallery

The imperial palace

Imperial palace staircase

The northwest tower

Rooftops of the Forbidden City


Tourists inside the Palace Museum

Architectures inside the Palace Museum

Bedchamber guardian lions

Ceiling of one of the buildings in the imperial garden


Nine Dragons screen

The emperor's throne

One of the many halls and palaces containing the emperor's imperial throne

Imperial roof decoration



[edit] Influences of the Forbidden City
Emperor Gia Long of Vietnam built a palace and fortress that was intended to be a smaller copy of the Chinese Forbidden City in the 1800s. Its ruins are in Huế. In English it is called the "Imperial City". The name of the inner palace complex in Vietnamese is translated literally as "Purple Forbidden City", which of course is the same as the Chinese name for Forbidden City in Beijing.
Marco Polo a joint NBC and RAI (Italy) TV miniseries broadcast in the early 1980s, was filmed inside the Forbidden City. This was artistic license, however, since historically, the Forbidden City did not exist in the Yuan Dynasty, during the time of Marco Polo's relationship with Kublai Khan.
The Last Emperor (1987) was the first feature film ever authorized by the government of the People's Republic of China to film in the Forbidden City.
Giacomo Puccini's opera, Turandot, about the story of a Chinese princess, was performed inside the Forbidden City for the first time in 1998.
The musician Yanni performed inside the Forbidden City to an audience of 120 million in 1997. [citation needed]
In 2004, the French musician Jean Michel Jarre performed the live concert in the Forbidden City, accompanied by 260 musicians as part of the "Year of France in China" festivities.
The 5th Avenue Theatre in Seattle, Washington imitates three ancient Chinese architectural achievements located in Beijing: the Forbidden City, the Temple of Heaven, and the Summer Palace. A nearly exact replica of the dome from the throne room of the Imperial palace in Bejing's Forbidden City graces the 5th Avenue Theatre’s ceiling. Authentic dragons and hoho birds scatter the walls of the theatre with an authentic Chinese quality. [citation needed]
A fictional city called Ba Sing Se in the cartoon series Avatar the Last Airbender is based upon the Forbidden City.
William Bell's novel "Forbidden City" a novel of modern china, is based upon a Canadian reporter and his son Alexander or Alex for short (or Ahrek Shan Da, as most of his Chinese friends call him) go to Beijing to do a reports on the Beijing and its people.

[edit] Reference
^ "Gugong" is also a generic name referring to all former palaces, another prominent example being the former Imperial Palaces (Mukden Palace) in Shenyang.
^ Technically, Tiananmen Gate is not part of the Forbidden City.
Ho and Bronson 2004. Splendors of China's Forbidden City. ISBN 1-85894-258-6.

[edit] See also
National Palace Museum
Chinese art
Chinese Palaces

[edit] External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Forbidden CityPalace Museum official site
Forbidden City, A Photographic Tour
ForbiddenCityChina.com Over 400 high quality photographs (2005-2006); maps; guide.
Photos Gallery
Links
Forbidden City Map
Forbidden City Satellite Map 1 & 2
Palace Museum Official Map
World heritage virtual tour via immersive panoramas
Forbidden City Introduction
Forbidden City Guide
Satellite photograph of the Forbidden City
Panoramic map of the Forbidden city
National Palace Museum official website (Taipei City, Taiwan)
China Museums
The 5th Avenue Theatre History and Photos
Imperial City, Huế photographs and text

2006-11-14 11:26:04 · answer #7 · answered by Rosemary G 3 · 0 1

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