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Immediately
to the west of the Forbidden City is a large lake area
which court officials of the Qing Dynasty called the Western
Lake (Xihaizi) or the Pool of Great Secretion (Taiyechi).
Centuries ago, this stretch of water was divided into
three sections- North Lake (Beihai), Central Lake (Zhonghai)
and South lake (Nanhai). The area between Xinhuamen (New
China) Gate on Chang' an Boulevard in the south and Yingtai
(SEA terrace Island) in the north is called South Lake.
The area north of the Hall of Diligent Government (Qinzhengdian)
and south of the Hall of Endless Blessings (Wanshandian)
is called Central Lake. It is connected to South Lake
by a lock near the old eastern gate. The area north of
the Hall of Received Brilliance (Chengguangdian) and south
of the Five-Drag-on Pavilions (Wulongting) is known as
North Lake or Beihai. A long white marble bridge-the Golden
Tortoise Jade Rainbow Bridge-divided Central Lake from
North Lake. The water supply for the lakes comes from
the Jade Spring Mountain (Yuquanshan) to the west of Beijing
and enters the city at the Deshengmen (Moral Victory)
Gate in the northwest corner of the old city.
The
fine natural hills and ponds in this area inspired the
emperors of the Liao Dynasty to choose it as their pleasure
park. During the Jin Dynasty, North Lake became the site
of the emperors' winter palace. In the Yuan Dynasty, the
lakes were enclosed as part of the Imperial Palace in
the new Mongol capital of Dadu, and the lakes were called
the pool of Great Secretion (Taiyechi). The lakes were
then widened and deepened, and the mud dredged heaped
up to the north of the Forbidden City to form Prospect
Hill (Jingshan). They attained their present dimensions
of two kilometers from north to south and, at their widest
point, 200 meters from east to west.
When
Emperor Yongle rebuilt the Imperial Palace in 1417, he
extended the walls to enclose both the former Yuan palace
and gardens to the west. In the Ming and Qing, the area
became known as the Western Gardens (Xiyuan) and continued
to serve palace residents as a place of leisure. During
the Qing Dynasty, refurbishment of the area continued
on a grand scale. The majority of the structures and relics,
which remain today date from that period.
After
the demise of the Qing Dynasty in 1911, Zhongnanhai (the
Central and South Lakes) were turned into a park for a
short period of time and served as the headquarters of
the government of Yuan Shikai. It is now the headquarters
of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party
and the State Council of the People' s Republic of China.
Nanhai
(the South Lake)
The
main gate of South Lake is Xinhuamen (New China) Gate,
which was originally known as the Precious Moon Tower.
This was the famous Gazing Home Tower (Wangxianlou) built
by Emperor Qianlong for his favorite Muslim Concubine
Xiang (Fragrant Consort). To remind this homesick lady
if her native Kashgaria (in present-day Xinjiang). Qianlong
had a mosque and Islamic-style marketplace built within
view of the tower. After the establishment of the Republic
of China in 1912, the Xinhuamen (New China) Gate was refurbished
and the signboard for Yuan Shikai' s presidential residence
was hung here.
The
gate is today the official entrance to the headquarters
of the people' s government, but visitors to the scenic
areas must enter by a gate at 81 Nanchang Street. A short
distance to the north, one comes to a pavilion, the floor
of which contains stone-lined channel which makes nine
turns. The bubbling of the water in the channel gives
this spot the name Flowing Water Music (Liushuiyin). To
the west is the Hall of Diligent Government (Qinzhengdian)
where Emperor Guangxu administered affairs of state. When
Yuan Shikai took up residence in Nanhai, he rebuilt the
hall in Western-style and used it to receive foreign guests.
To
the south is a curving bridge to the Sea Terrace Island
(Yingtai), which is actually a peninsula in the South
Lake. The tall granite structure on the other side of
the bridge is the Southern Terrace (Nantai), the principal
viewing place in this section of the park. The buildings
here date from the reigns of emperors Shunzhi (1644-1661)
and Kangxi (1662-1722). Among the dozen or so poetically
named pavilions, gates, halls and towers, we shall only
mention the following: the Hall of the Fragrant Screen
(Xiangyidian), where there is a room set aside for drinking
tea; the Fairy Isles Pavilion (Penglaige), next to which
stands a specimen of fossilized pine nearly three meters
tall-an inscription nearby attributes the stone to the
Six Dynasties period (220-589); on each side of this stone
are several flower beds, and in front of it a stone bridge
which leads to a pavilion on the water known as the Welcoming
Fragrance Pavilion (Yingxunting), where there are numerous
stone inscriptions praising the virtues and achievements
of the emperors. Looking south across the water from there,
one can see the north side of the screen wall, which stands
directly inside New China Gate.
Among
the other relics on the island are a group of imitation
stalagmites inscribed with the calligraphy of Emperor
Qianlong and another stone inscription in the same emperor'
s hand commemorating a willow tree in the shape of the
Chinese character for"man"(?) which once stood
on this spot. A limb of this willow was bent by a strong
wind, and some kind soul moored one of its branches to
the ground to support the rest of the tree. This branch
actually took root and the resulting grotesquely shaped
tree so delighted Emperor Qianlong that he composed a
prose poem about it.
The
Sea Terrace Island was one of the favorite summer resort
spots of Qing emperors. Kangxi and Qianlong both administered
the empire from here, and after the failure of the Reform
Movement of 1898, Emperor Guangxu was imprisoned here
by Empress Dowager Cixi. He died in 1908 in the Hanyuan
(Cherishing the Origin) Palace. In the early years of
the Republican period, Yuan Shikai arranged for Li yuanhong,
vice-president of the Republic, to make his residence
here. After the establishment of the People' Republic
of China in 1949, various departments of the State Council
made use of its many halls to hold private small-scale
industrial exhibitions. A major restoration project was
completed in 1975.
Northwest
from the Sea Terrace Island, one comes to the Garden of
Plenty (Fengzeyuan), in which there is a small plot of
land called the Trial Sowing Grounds (Yangengdi) where
the Qing emperors rehearsed on a somewhat smaller scale
the plowing ceremony held at the Altar of the God of Agriculture.
One particular rehearsal which took place in 1888 is recorded
in the diary of Weng Tonghe, Emperor Guangxu' s tutor:
"Shortly after 9 a.m. the emperor arrived at the
yellow tent by palanquin, rested for a short while, and
removed his long gown. Officials presented him with a
plow and a whip, and Weng Tonghe sowed the seeds. Two
old peasants led the oxen, and with imperial guards supporting
the plow, the emperor sowed four furrows. His Majesty
then rested in the yellow tent and frank tea before returning
to the palace." Having been touched by the "dragon
hands" of the emperor, this ceremonial plow became
a sacred object. It is now on display in the Palace Museum.
Mao
Zedong's former residence, a traditional Beijing home
built around a courtyard, is also here in the Garden of
Plenty. Chairman Mao occupied the rooms on the northern
side of the courtyard; the rooms to the west now display
his personal effects; his office and bedroom to the east
remain exactly as before, with the late Mao' s desk, bathrobe
and slippers on display. In Qing times, these rooms were
known as the "Library of Chrysanthemum Fragrance."
To
the west of the Garden of Plenty is the Pavilion of Lotus
Breeze and Orchid-Scented Dew (Hefenghuiluting), and immediately
to the south, an elegant white marble gateway with the
inscription "Peaceful Valley" (Jinggu) carved
into its lintel.
In
addition, a number of other buildings not yet open to
the public are worthy of mention. The Hall of the Calm
Sea (Haiyantang), a Western-style structure, was formerly
used by Cixi for entertaining women guests. The hall is
furnished with chairs and tables in Louis XY style imported
from France. When Yuan Shikai came into power, he changed
its name to the Hall of Benevolence (Jerentang) and continued
to use it for entertaining visitors. In 1927, when the
warlord Zhang Zuolin took over Beijing, he made the Hall
of Benevolence his home. And in 1923, when the warlord
Cao Kun was president of the Republic, he too made his
offices here. When the Christian General Feng Yuxiang
captured Cao, it became his prison.
In
the South Lake district, there is an interesting set of
10 square stones, each inscribed with a poem written by
different people. Though the nearby Swastika Corridor
(Wanzilang) has been torn down, to the south of its former
site stands the Stone Chamber (Shishi), built entirely
of white marble. Inside the chamber is a "golden
casket" --actually a gilded safe -- which played
a critical role in the history of the early Republic.
In 1914, Yuan Shikai reformed the "Laws for Electing
the President" by having the names of three reselected
candidates for his succession-including his own-placed
inside the safe. When the time came, his specially appointed
parliament had little choice but to choose Yuan as the
new president.
The
most impressive in the South Lake area are the groves
of old trees, elms conspicuous for their absence. One
day in 1883, Empress Dowager Cixi was out for a stroll
when a caterpillar fell from an infested elm and stung
her hand. Enraged she ordered all the elm trees in that
area cut down.
Zhonghai
(the Central Lake)
The
area north of the Hall of Diligent Government to Fuhuamen
Gate is full of pre-and post-liberation buildings which,
with the exception of the Hall of Embracing Benevolence
(Huairentang), are not open to the public.
The
Hall of Embracing Benevolence is the most important building
in the Central Lake area. It was originally the site of
the Hall of Imperial Pomp (Yiluandian), which was destroyed
by the Eight-power Allied Forces. When Cixi returned to
Beijing from Xi' an, she spent more than 5 million silver
dollars to erect a Tower of Buddhist Reflections (Fozhaolou).
During the first year of the Republic of China (1912),
the tower' s name was changed to the Hall of Embracing
Benevolence. The National Assembly and other governing
bodies of the early Republic met here. After Yuan Shikai'
s death, the former president's coffin was kept here temporarily.
After 1949, the hall was used for meetings of the First
People' s Political Consultative Conference and other
important political bodies. In front of the hall is a
display of cultural relic: 12 bronze statues with animal
heads and human torsos; bronze lions decorated with cloisonni;
commemorative tablets; and images of the 12 animal signs
used to symbolize the year in which a person is born.
Local school children are occasionally brought to visit.
On
the northwest bank of the Central Lake is another important
structure, the tower of Vermilion Light (Ziguangge), also
called the Flat Terrace (Pingtai), where Emperor Zhengde
(reigned 1506-1521) of the Ming Dynasty watched his troops
practice calisthenics and archery. These displays continued
during the Qing Dynasty when portraits of meritorious
officials from past dynasties hung inside the tower's
hall. In the first lunar month of every year, the emperor
would hold a banquet here in honor of his ministers. Fine
old maps and paintings are preserved in the tower in excellent
condition.
The
northeast bank of the Central Lake is the location of
the famous Plantain Garden (Jiaoyuan) or Virtuous Garden,
the former site of the Ming Dynasty Palace of Sublime
Wisdom (Chongzhidian). The path leading north along the
eastern side of the lake is lined with scholar, willow
and fruit trees as well as pavilions and small decorative
buildings. During the Qianlong period (1736-1796), the
Plantain Garden served as a schoolroom for the younger
eunuchs who lived in the palace. On the Buddhist Ghost
Festival, celebrated on the evening of the 15th day of
the seventh lunar month, floating lanterns were sent out
"to sea," turning the lakes into a field of
twinkling stars.
To
the north of the Plantain Garden is the Temple of Endless
Blessings (Wanshandian). The main hall contains images
of the Three Buddhas -- the Goddess of Mercy (Guanyin),
Manjusri (Wenshu) and Samantabhadra (Puxian) -- and the
eighteen disciples of Buddha (Luohan). At the rear of
the main hall is a statue of the Goddess of Mercy of the
Southern Seas (Nanhai Guanyin). The Hall if a Thousand
Buddhas stands tot eh rear of this temple complex with
an octagonal sandalwood pagoda seven storied high dating
from the Ming Dynasty. Other halls house sculptural representations
of legendary emperors, Buddhas and other gods and immortals.
Of particular interest is the Hall of the Dragon Kings
(Longwangtang) housing images of the dragon kings, which
govern streams, rivers, lakes and seas.
From
the eastern gate of the Plantain Garden walking north,
one will pass a small hill and pond before coming to a
thatched gate. Continuing down the path, there is the
Pavilion of Clouds on the Water (Shuiyunxie). Its name
is derived from the way it appears to float amidst clouds
reflected on the lake.
A
large stone tablet inscribed with the calligraphy of Emperor
Qianlong, "Autumn Winds on Taiye," immortalizes
this spot as one of the Eight Great Sights of Yanjing.
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