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The
Imperial College is located immediately to the west of
the Confucian Temple and, in fact, connects with the temple
through a side gate. Generally recognized as the highest
official institution of learning in imperial China, it
was first established in 1287 during the Yuan Dynasty
and subsequently enlarged several times, attaining its
present dimensions during the reign of Emperor Qianlong
of the Qing Dynasty. After the founding of the People’s
Republic in 1949, the Imperial College was completely
renovated and the Capital Library was incorporated within
its grounds.
After
entering the main gate, the visitor will be confronted
by a pair of wells and the Taixue (Highest Scholarship)
Gate, also known as the Jixian (Assembled Virtue) Gate.
Inside this gate is a glazed tile memorial archway with
bell and drum towers to the east and west. Directly in
front of the gate is the famous Biyong (Jade Disc) Hall.
The square pavilion, which stands in the center of a circular
pond, has a double-eaved roof surmounted by a gilded sphere.
The pond is crossed by four marble bridges and provided
on four sides with stone spouts in the shape of dragonheads.
It was here that eh emperor came occasionally to expound
the classics to an audience composed of civil and military
officials from the imperial court and students of the
Imperial College.
The east and west auxiliary halls of the Biyong Hall originally
housed the Qianlong Stone Scriptures. In the middle of
the 18th century, Emperor Qianlong ordered to have the
Thirteen Classics engraved in stone. To carry out this
order, Jiang Heng, a scholar from Jiangsu Province, spent
20 years carving the 630,000 Chinese characters onto 189
stone tablets. Today these tables are located to the east
of the Taixue Gate.
Behind the Biyong Hall stands the former Chongwen (Exalted
Literature) Pavilion, which was used as a library during
the Yuan Dynasty. Later its name became the Yilun (Ethics)
Hall. Here the emperor and other noted scholars gave lectures
during the period before the Biyong Hall was built. It
is now one of the reading rooms of the Capital Library.
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