Summer Palace
The Summer Palace landscape, dominated
mainly by Longevity Hill and Kunming Lake, covers an
area of 2.9 square kilometers, three quarters of which
is under water. Its 70,000 square meters of building
space features a variety of palaces, gardens and other
ancient-style architectural structures. Well known for
its large and priceless collection of cultural relics,
it was among the first group of historical and cultural
heritage sites in China to be placed under special state
protection.
The Summer Palace, originally named
Qingyi Yuan or the Garden of Clear Ripples, was first
constructed in 1750. It was razed to the ground by the
Anglo-French Allied Forces in 1860. The Government of
the Qing Dynasty started to rebuild it in 1886 with
funds that it had misappropriated from the Imperial
Navy and other sources. Renamed two years later as Yihe
Yuan or the Garden of Health and Harmony, it was supposed
to serve as a summer resort for the Empress Dowager
Cixi. Known also as the Summer Palace, it was ravaged
by the Allied Forces of the Eight Powers that invaded
China in 1900. The damage was repaired in 1902. Since
the founding of the People¡¯s Republic of
China, the Summer Palace has undergone several major
renovations. Its major attractions such as the Four
Great Regions, Suzhou Street, the Pavilion of Bright
Scenery, the Hall of Serenity, the Wenchang Galleries
and the Plowing and Weaving Scenery Area have been successively
restored.
The Summer Palace is a monument to
classical Chinese architecture, in terms of both garden
design and construction. Borrowing scenes from surrounding
landscapes, it radiates not only the grandeur of an
imperial garden but also the beauty of nature in a seamless
combination that best illustrates the guiding principle
of traditional Chinese garden design: ¡°The
works of men should match the works of Heaven.
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