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Prospect
Hill (Jingshan) is situated just north of the Palace Museum.
From the Yuan Dynasty onwards, this area was a "forbidden
garden." Opened to the public in 1928, it formally
became a park after 1949.
Prospect
Hill was built up from mud dredged from the surrounding
lakes and moats at the time of the construction of the
Yuan capital Dadu. At that time it was known as Green
Hill. During the Ming Dynasty, it was enlarged to its
present size and, because coal was stored at the foot
of the hill, it became known as the Coal Hill (Meishan).
In the time of Qianlong (1736-1796), a palace was built
on the north slope and a tile-glazed pavilion built on
its peak. Because the hillside was planted with numerous
fruit trees, the park was also known for a time as the
Garden of a Hundred Fruits (Baiguoyuan). Ancient cypresses
thrived, and in tribute to its scenery, it was renamed
the Prospect Hill.
Inside
the North Upper Gate stands the Beautiful View Pavilion
(Qiwanglou). In the past, memorial tablets used by the
imperial family in their consecration of Confucius were
stored here. It now serves as a hall for cultural exhibitions.
The
hill has five peaks, each decked with a pavilion constructed
in 1751 by order Qianlong. The pavilion on the central
peak is called the Pavilion of Ten Thousand Spring times.
To the east are the pavilion of Admiring the Surroundings
and the Pavilion of Gazing at Excellence, and to the west
the Pavilion of Rich View and the Pavilion of Accumulated
Fragrance. The pavilions once held a bronze Buddha each
(collectively known as the "Five Flavored Immortals"),
but four of them were removed by the troops pf the Eight-Power
Allied Forces in 1900, while the fifth, that in the Pavilion
of Ten Thousand Spring times, lost its left arm. But the
arm was restored later.
The
central summit can be reached via paths on both the eastern
and western sides of the hill. In pre-skyscraper days,
this was the highest point in Beijing' s Inner City and
offered the visitor an unequaled view of the capital and
its surroundings. To the north lies the Di' anmen (Gate
of Earthly Peace) Street and the lofty Drum Tower at the
northern end of the street. Southwest, the viewer takes
in the Shicha Lake and Beihai Park. Looking south reveals
the entire symmetrical plan of Beijing, with the ancient
capital' s principal buildings lined up along its north-south
axis.
On
the eastern pathway leading down the Prospect Hill there
once stood a diminutive scholar tree, which was surrounded
by a red brick wall. It was here that the last emperor
of the Ming Dynasty hung himself on the morning of March
19, 1644. Two days earlier, Li Zicheng had led a peasant
army into Beijing and accepted the surrender of Ming troops
outside the city. On March 18, the troops guarding Fuchengmen
and Xibianmen opened the gates and allowed the insurgents
to enter the city. Before dawn on March 19, Chongzhen
(reigned 1628-1644) ran out of the palace without his
crown, his hair loose and unkempt. He wore a long white
gown embroidered with a dragon and a single soft-soled
shoe (history failed to record what happened to the other
one) borrowed from Wang Cheng' en, a court eunuch. His
hands stained with the blood of Concubine Yuan and two
princesses, he reached the top of the hill and said, "I
have always treated my subordinates well, yet today, finding
myself in this wretched state, why is it that not a single
one of them is here with me to sacrifice his life? Perhaps
because they don' t know that I am here, which would explain
why they are not hurrying after me." He walked down
the hill and hung himself with his belt on an old scholar
tree. There used to be a stone stela with this inscription:
"The place where Emperor Sizong (his posthumous title)
died for his country." In the 1950s, this stela was
replaced by a wooden plague reading, "The place where
Emperor Chongzhen hung himself."
On the north slope of the hill are the Hall of Longevity
of the Emperors (Shouhuangdian) and the Hall for Observing
Morals (Guandetang). The former originally contained portraits
of the Qing emperors. According to the rules of the Qing
court, the emperor visited the hall in person each season
to offer sacrifices and was required to dismount from
his carriage and walk when he passed through the spot
where Chongzhen hung himself. This diversion was intended
to remind later emperors of the tragedy, which befell
one of their predecessors. During the Republican period,
the Bureau of Cultural Relic confiscated the collection
of so-called "imperial faces" despite the strong
objections of the imperial family.
In
the 1950s, the Hall of Longevity of the Emperors was turned
into the Beijing Children' s Palace, a recreational and
educational facility.
Add:
Jingshan Qianjie, Xicheng District;
Entry
ticket: 2 yuan;
Transport:
Trolley bus No.s 101, 103, 109, 111 and bus No.s 812,
814 and 819;
Tel:
86-10-64044071.
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