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The Palace Museum, historically and artistically one of
the most comprehensive Chinese museums, was established
on the foundation of the palace that was the ritual center
of two dynasties, the Ming and the Qing, and their collections
of treasures. Designated by the State Council as one of
China's foremost protected monuments in 1961, the Palace
Museum was also made a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1987.
Situated
at the heart of Beijing, the Palace Museum is approached
through Tiananmen Gate. Immediately to the north of the
Palace Museum is Prospect Hill (also called Coal Hill),
while on the east and west are Wangfujing and Zhongnanhai
neighborhoods. It is a location endowed with cosmic significance
by ancient China's astronomers. Correlating the emperor's
abode, which they considered the pivot of the terrestrial
world, with the Pole Star (Ziweiyuan), which they believed
to be at the center of the heavens, they called the palace
The Purple Forbidden City. The Forbidden City was built
from 1406 to 1420 by the third Ming emperor Yongle who,
upon usurping the throne, determined to |