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Old Summer Palace

The Old Summer Palace, also known as Yuanmingyuan (traditional Chinese: 圓明園; simplified Chinese: 圆明园; pinyin: Yuánmíng Yuán; lit. 'Gardens of Perfect Brightness') or Yuanmingyuan Park,[1] originally called the Imperial Gardens (traditional Chinese: 御園; simplified Chinese: 御园; pinyin: Yù Yuán), and sometimes called the Winter Palace,[2][3] was a complex of palaces and gardens in present-day Haidian District, Beijing, China. It is 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) northwest of the walls of the former Imperial City section of Beijing. Widely perceived as the pinnacle work of Chinese imperial garden and palace design, the Old Summer Palace was known for its extensive collection of gardens, its building architecture and numerous art and historical treasures. Constructed throughout the 18th and early 19th centuries, the Old Summer Palace was the main imperial residence of Qianlong Emperor of the Qing dynasty and his successors, and where they handled state affairs; the Forbidden City was used for formal ceremonies. The Garden was reputed as the "Garden of Gardens" (simplified Chinese: 万园之园; traditional Chinese: 萬園之園; pinyin: wàn yuán zhī yuán) in its heyday was "Arguably the greatest concentration of historic treasures in the world, dating and representing a full 5,000 years of an ancient civilization" said: Robert McGee, chaplain to the British forces.

Old Summer Palace
Simplified Chinese圆明园
Traditional Chinese圓明園
Literal meaningGardens of Perfect Brightness
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinYuánmíng Yuán
Imperial Gardens
Simplified Chinese御园
Traditional Chinese御園
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinYù Yuán

During the Second Opium War, French and British troops captured the palace on 6 October 1860, looting and destroying the imperial collections over the next few days.[4][5] As news emerged that an Anglo-French delegation had been imprisoned and tortured by the Qing government, with 19 delegation members being killed,[6] the British High Commissioner to China, James Bruce, 8th Earl of Elgin, retaliated by ordering the complete destruction of the palace on 18 October, which was then carried out by troops under his command.[5] The palace was so large – covering more than 3.5 square kilometres (860 acres) – that it took 4,000 men three days to destroy it.[7] Many exquisite artworks – sculptures, porcelain, jade, silk robes, elaborate textiles, gold objects and more – were looted and are now located in 47 museums around the world, according to UNESCO.[8]

Overview

 
The Imperial Gardens as they once stood
 
Plan of the Old Summer Palace

The Imperial Gardens at the Old Summer Palace were made up of three gardens:

  1. Garden of Perfect Brightness (圆明园; 圓明園; Yuánmíng Yuán)
  2. Garden of Eternal Spring (长春园; 長春園; Chángchūn Yuán)
  3. Garden of Elegant Spring (绮春园; 綺春園; Qǐchūn Yuán)

Together, they covered an area of 3.5 square kilometres (860 acres), almost five times the size of the Forbidden City grounds and eight times the size of the Vatican City. Hundreds of structures, such as halls, pavilions, temples, galleries, gardens, lakes and bridges, stood on the grounds.

In addition, hundreds of examples of Chinese artwork and antiquities were stored in the halls, along with unique copies of literary works and compilations. Several famous landscapes of southern China had been reproduced in the Imperial Gardens.

Location

The palace was built on a site abundant in fresh water, near the Jade Spring Hill. The region was renowned for its beautiful landscape. Country homes were built here beginning in the 13th century, during the rule of the Yuan dynasty, then in the 16th-century Li Wei of the Ming Dynasty built the Qinghua Yuan estate at the site.[9]

Western mansions

The most visible architectural remains of the Old Summer Palace can be found in the Western mansions (Xiyang Lou) section of 18th-century European-style palaces, fountains and formal gardens. These structures, built partly of stone but mainly with a Chinese infrastructure of timber columns, coloured tiles and brick walls, were planned and designed by the Jesuit Giuseppe Castiglione with Michel Benoist responsible for the fountains and waterwork. Qianlong Emperor became interested in the architectural project after seeing an engraving of a European fountain, and employed Castiglione and Benoist to carry out the work to satisfy his taste for exotic buildings and objects.[10]

Western-style palaces, pavilion, aviaries, a maze, fountains, basins, and waterworks as well as perspective paintings organized as an outdoor theatre stage were constructed. A striking clock fountain was placed in front of the largest palace, the Haiyan Tang. The fountain had twelve animals of the Chinese zodiac that spouted water in turn every 2 hours, but all spouting water in concert at noon.[10] These European-style buildings however only occupied an area along the back of the Garden of Eternal Spring that was small compared to the overall area of the gardens. More than 95% of the Imperial Gardens were made up of Chinese-style buildings. There were also a few buildings in Tibetan and Mongol styles, reflecting the diversity of the Qing Empire.

History

 
Old Summer Palace historic drawing

Initial construction of the Old Summer Palace began in 1707 during the reign of the Kangxi Emperor. It was intended as a gift for the emperor's fourth son, Prince Yong (the future Yongzheng Emperor), who would greatly expand the Imperial Gardens in 1725. The Yongzheng Emperor also introduced the waterworks of the gardens, creating lakes, streams and ponds to complement the rolling hills and grounds, and named 28 scenic spots within the garden. The Yongzheng Emperor also constructed a number of "living tableaux" he and his family could observe and interact with. One such scene was called "Crops as Plentiful as Fields" which involved court eunuchs pretending to be rural farmers on an island.[11] Another was called the "Courtyard of Universal Happiness" which was a mock village where the imperial family could interact with shopkeepers, again eunuchs in disguise.[11]

During the Qianlong Emperor's reign, the second expansion was well underway and the number of scenic spots increased to 50 (the emperor personally directed the construction process). The splendors of the palace and the grounds were depicted in the Forty Scenes of the Yuanmingyuan, an album produced in 1744 by the Qianlong Emperor's court painters.[12] The construction of the European-style palaces was initiated in 1747.

The last European appearance in the Old Summer Palace in the context of traditional Chinese imperial foreign relations was a diplomatic mission in 1795 representing the interests of the Dutch and Dutch East India Company.[13] The Titsingh delegation included Isaac Titsingh,[14] the Dutch-American Andreas Everardus van Braam Houckgeest,[15] and the Frenchman Chrétien-Louis-Joseph de Guignes.[16] Both published complementary accounts of the mission. Titsingh died before he could publish his version of the events.

Destruction

 
Looting of the Old Summer Palace by Anglo-French forces in 1860 during the Second Opium War.
 
Ruins of the Old Summer Palace 1870s
 
Drawing of formal European gardens in the Xiyang Lou (西洋樓, Western mansions) section
 
Ruins of the European-style palaces
 
The original figures in a drawing before the looting with all 12 head figures of the Old Summer Palace fountain

In 1860, during the Second Opium War, a combined Anglo-French expeditionary forces, having marched inland from the coast at Tianjin (Tientsin), arrived in Beijing (Peking).[citation needed]

In mid-September, two envoys, Henry Loch and Harry Parkes went ahead of the main force under a flag of truce to negotiate with Prince Yi and representatives of the Qing Empire at Tongzhou (Tungchow) and to scout out campsites behind enemy lines. The delegation included Thomas William Bowlby, a journalist for The Times, along with a small escort of British and Indian soldiers. As the talks concluded on 18 September, the Allied forces attacked Qing troops in the area who they believed were redeploying for an ambush, and the Qing court learned that the British had detained the prefect of Tianjin. It was around this time that the Qing general Sengge Rinchen took the members of the delegation prisoner as they were traversing Qing lines to return to the expeditionary forces. The delegates and their escort were taken to the Ministry of Justice (or Board of Punishments) in Beijing, where they were confined and tortured. Parkes and Loch were returned after two weeks, with 14 other survivors. Nineteen British, French and Indian captives died as a result of the torture.[17][18][19]

On the night of 5 October, French units diverted from the main attack force towards the Old Summer Palace. At the time, the palace was occupied by only some eunuchs and palace maids; the Xianfeng Emperor and his entourage had already fled to the Chengde Mountain Resort in Hebei. Although the French commander Charles Cousin-Montauban assured his British counterpart, James Hope Grant, that "nothing had been touched", extensive looting of the palace had already been carried out by Allied soldiers.[20] There was no significant resistance to the looting, even though many Qing soldiers were in the vicinity.[20]

On October 18, Lord Elgin, the British High Commissioner to China, retaliated against the torture of the delegation members by ordering the destruction of the Old Summer Palace.[21] Destroying the Old Summer Palace was also a warning to the Qing Empire not to use kidnapping as a political tactic against Britain.[22] It took 3,500 British troops to set the entire place ablaze, and the massive fire lasted for three days. Unbeknownst to the troops, some 300 remaining eunuchs and palace maids, who concealed themselves from the soldiers in locked rooms, perished when the palace complex was burnt. Only 13 buildings survived intact, most of them in the remote areas or by the lakeside. (The palace would be sacked once again and completely destroyed in 1900 when the forces of the Eight-Nation Alliance invaded Beijing.[23]) Charles George Gordon, who was then a 27-year-old captain in the Royal Engineers and part of the 1860 Anglo-French expeditionary force, wrote about his experience:

We went out, and, after pillaging it, burned the whole place, destroying in a vandal-like manner most valuable property which [could] not be replaced for four millions. We got upward of £48 apiece prize money ... I have done well. The [local] people are very civil, but I think the grandees hate us, as they must after what we did the Palace. You can scarcely imagine the beauty and magnificence of the places we burnt. It made one's heart sore to burn them; in fact, these places were so large, and we were so pressed for time, that we could not plunder them carefully. Quantities of gold ornaments were burnt, considered as brass. It was wretchedly demoralising work for an army.[24]

British and French soldiers preferred porcelain while neglecting bronze vessels prized locally for cooking and burial in tombs.[25] Many such treasures dated back to the Shang, Zhou and Han dynasties and were up to 3,600 years old. A specific exception was the looting of the Haiyantang Zodiac fountain with its twelve bronze animal heads.[26] Some of the most notable treasures ended up at the Chinese Museum in the Palace of Fontainebleau, which Empress Eugénie specifically set up in 1867 to house these newly acquired collections.

 
Ruins of Yuanmingyuan open area tourist map

Once the Old Summer Palace had been reduced a sign was raised by the Allied expeditionary force with an inscription in Chinese stating, "This is the reward for perfidy and cruelty". The burning of the palace was the last act of the war.[27]

According to Professor Wang Daocheng of the Renmin University of China, not all of the palace was destroyed in the original burning.[28] Instead, some historical records indicate that 16 of the garden scenes survived the destruction in 1860.[28] Wang identifies the Republican era and the Cultural Revolution as two significant periods that contributed further to the destruction of the Old Summer Palace.[28] Photographic evidence and eyewitness accounts make it clear that (although the palace complex was initially protected by the Qing emperors) it was during the Boxer Rebellion and in the immediate aftermath of the fall of the dynasty when most of the surviving structures were destroyed. Further, the Imperial household itself sold off the magnificent trees in the garden for revenue during the 1890s and after 1900 the palace was used as a veritable builder's yard for anyone who wanted construction materials. Entire buildings were built of materials taken from the Yuanming Yuan and smart Peking houses were adorned with sculptures and architectural elements plundered from the site.

Like the Forbidden City, no commoner had ever been allowed into the Old Summer Palace, as it was used exclusively by the imperial family of the Qing Empire.[29] The burning of the Old Summer Palace is still a very sensitive issue in China today.[25] The destruction of the palace has been perceived as barbaric and criminal by many Chinese, as well as by external observers. In his "Expédition de Chine", Victor Hugo described the looting as, "Two robbers breaking into a museum. One has looted, the other has burnt. ... one of the two conquerors filled its pockets, seing that, the other filled its safes; and they came back to Europe laughing hand-in-hand. ... Before history, one of the bandits will be called France and the other England."[30][31] In his letter, Hugo hoped that one day France would feel guilty and return what it had plundered from China.[32]

Mauricio Percara, journalist and Argentine writer who works at China Radio International, talks about the apology through the literature by Victor Hugo and mentioned in his story entitled redemption the bust of the French writer located in the old Summer Palace: "at the site where their French peers ever posed his destructive feet today a radiant bust of the great Victor Hugo rises. From the old Summer Palace, the gardens of perfect brightness, a righteous French poses her look of stone in the snow falling obediently on the worn floor of the capital of the North."[33]

Aftermath

 
The pavilion and the stone arch are among the few remaining buildings in the Old Summer Palace

Following the sacking of the Old Summer Palace, the Qing imperial court relocated to the Forbidden City.

In 1873, the teenage Tongzhi Emperor attempted to rebuild the Old Summer Palace, on the pretext of turning it into a place of retirement for his two former regents, the empress dowagers Ci'an and Cixi. However, the imperial court lacked the financial resources to rebuild the palace, and at the urging of the court, the emperor finally agreed to stop the project in 1874. During the 1880s, an adjacent imperial gardens, the Gardens of Clear Ripples (the present-day Summer Palace) was restored for the use of Empress Dowager Cixi as a new summer resort, albeit on a smaller scale.

A few Chinese-style buildings in the outlying Elegant Spring Garden also survived the fire. Some of these buildings were restored by the Tongzhi Emperor before the project was abandoned. In 1900, many of the buildings that had survived or had been restored were burnt for good by the forces of the Eight-Nation Alliance.

Most of the site was left abandoned and used by local farmers as agricultural land. Only in the 1980s was the site reclaimed by the government and turned into a historical site. The Yuanmingyuan Artists Colony became famous for germinating a new wave of painters such as Fang Lijun and musicians such as Fa Zi on the site before it was shut down by the government and many artists relocated to the Songzhuang area outside of Beijing.[34] Debates in the 1990s arose regarding restoration and development issues and a more recent environmental controversy brought a new political life to the park as it became a symbol of China's "national wound".[35]

In the present day, the ruins of the European-style palaces are the most prominent building remnants on the site. This has misled some visitors to believe wrongly that the Old Summer Palace was made up only of European-style buildings.

Recent developments and plans

 
Haiyantang Water Clock Fountain. The original figures in a drawing before the looting with all 12 head figures-eight of the 12 figures have been recovered-four are still missing
 
The site of the water Fountain in 2012
 
Replicas of the 12 heads
 
Parts of the Zhengjue Temple (正觉寺) of Elegant Spring Garden are being refurbished
 
Entrance to the Yuanmingyuan Park (site of the original gate to the Elegant Spring Garden)

There are currently several plans in China for rebuilding the Imperial Gardens, but such moves have been opposed on the grounds that they will destroy an important relic of modern Chinese history. In addition, any rebuilding would be a colossal undertaking, and no rebuilding of above-the-ground structures has been approved. However, the lakes and waterways in the eastern half of the gardens have been dug up again and refilled with water, while hills around the lakes have been cleared of brushwood, recreating long-forgotten vistas. Several temples located inside the Old Summer Palace grounds have also been refurbished and rebuilt.

In February 2005, work was undertaken to reduce water loss from the lakes and canals in the Old Summer Palace by covering a total of 1.33 square kilometres (0.51 sq mi) of the beds with a membrane to reduce seepage. The park administration argued the prevention of water loss saves the park money, since water would have to be added to the lakes only once per year instead of three times. However, opponents of the project, such as Professor Zhengchun Zhang of Lanzhou University, feared the measure will destroy the ecology of the park, which depends on the water seepage from the lakes and the connection between the lakes and the underground water system. It is also feared the reduced seepage from the lakes will disturb Beijing's underground water system which is already suffering from depletion. There are also concerns about the gardens, which is a designated heritage site in the city of Beijing, changing their natural appearance. This issue, when brought up with the general public several weeks later, immediately caused an uproar from the press and became one of the hottest debates on the Internet in China due to the still painful memory of foreign humiliation epitomised in the destruction of the Old Summer Palace. The Beijing Environmental Protection Bureau (BEPB) recently[when?] conducted an assessment of the environmental impact of the measure.

A partial copy of the palace, the "New Yuanming Gardens" (圆明新园; 圓明新園), was built in 1997 in the southern city of Zhuhai in Guangdong province, as an amusement park of 1.39 square kilometres (0.54 sq mi), including an 80,000 square metres (860,000 sq ft) lake.[36]

Up to the present, many relics which were taken from the Old Summer Palace remain in foreign museums and private collections. Although the Chinese government has tried to recover them, only a few statuettes from the Garden of Eternal Spring have actually been returned. Seven of the 21 columns displayed at the KODE Art Museums in Bergen, Norway were returned to Peking University in 2014 as part of a deal set up by alumnus Huang Nubo, a real estate developer who donated 10 million Norwegian kroner (US$1.6 million) to the museum, according to the China Daily.[37][38]

It is still debated in China whether to apply for an inclusion of the Old Summer Palace on the list of UNESCO World Heritage Sites.[39]

Transport

The ruins of the Old Summer Palace remain open to the public and are an important tourist attraction in Haidian District,[40] the Yuanmingyuan Park.[1] They can be accessed from Yuanmingyuan Park station on Line 4 of the Beijing Subway.

Gallery

Hundreds more photographs of the site can be found on the website Colonial Architecture Project[41]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b . yuanmingyuanpark.cn. Archived from the original on 2021-05-08.
  2. ^ ZHANG Ming-jian (2007). Impact of English on Chinese mainland: From historical, educational and political dimensions (PDF). US-China Education Review. p. 62. Retrieved 13 January 2021.
  3. ^ "Dagu Fort". Top China Travel. Retrieved 13 January 2021.
  4. ^ Ringmar 2013, p. 6.
  5. ^ a b Bowlby, Chris (2 February 2015). "The palace of shame that makes China angry". BBC News. Retrieved 28 February 2015.
  6. ^ Hevia 2003, p. 47.
  7. ^ . www.oxfordtoday.ox.ac.uk. Archived from the original on 2018-04-17. Retrieved 2018-06-30.
  8. ^ 张行健. "Old Summer Palace marks 157th anniversary of massive loot". www.chinadaily.com.cn. Retrieved 2018-06-30.
  9. ^ Wong, Young-Tsu. Paradise Lost: The Imperial Garden Yuanming Yuan. University of Hawai'i Press. p. 25.
  10. ^ a b Marco Musillo (2011). "Mid-Qing Arts and Jesuit Visions: Encounters and Exchanges in Eighteenth-Century Beijing". In Susan Delson (ed.). Ai Weiwei: Circle of Animals. Prestel Publishing. pp. 146–161.
  11. ^ a b Barme, Geremie (June 1996). "The Garden of Perfect Brightness, a Life in Ruins" (PDF). East Asian History. Retrieved 13 March 2016.
  12. ^ Lillian M. Li, The 40 Scenes MIT Visualizing Culture
  13. ^ O'Neil, Patricia O. (1995). Missed Opportunities: Late 18th Century Chinese Relations with England and the Netherlands. [Ph.D. dissertation, University of Washington]
  14. ^ Duyvendak, J. J. L. (1937). "The Last Dutch Embassy to the Chinese Court (1794–1795)". T'oung Pao 33:1–137.
  15. ^ van Braam Houckgeest, Andreas Everardus. (1797). Voyage de l'ambassade de la Compagnie des Indes Orientales hollandaises vers l'empereur de la Chine, dans les années 1794 et 1795; see also 1798 English translation: An authentic account of the embassy of the Dutch East-India company, to the court of the emperor of China, in the years 1974 and 1795, Vol. I. 2009-02-15 at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ de Guignes, Chrétien-Louis-Joseph (1808). Voyage à Pékin, Manille et l'Île de France.
  17. ^ Ringmar 2013, pp. 78–79.
  18. ^ Wong 2001, p. 136.
  19. ^ Hevia 2003, p. 45–47.
  20. ^ a b M'Ghee, Robert. (1862). How we got to Pekin: A Narrative of the Campaign in China of 1860, pp. 202-216.
  21. ^ E. W. R. Lumby, "Lord Elgin and the Burning of the Summer Palace." History Today (July 1960) 10#7 pp 479-48.
  22. ^ Endacott, G. B. (2005) [1962]. A biographical sketch-book of early Hong Kong. Hong Kong University Press. ISBN 978-962-209-742-1.
  23. ^ 火燒圓明園 (Huoshao Yuanmingyuan Burning the Yuanmingyuan)China.com
  24. ^ Hake, Alfred Egmont (1884). The Story of Chinese Gordon. Vol. 1 (3rd ed.). London, England: Remington and Co. p. 33.
  25. ^ a b Chris Bowlby (2 February 2015). "The palace of shame that makes China angry". BBC.
  26. ^ "Chinese lawyers apply for injunction to stop sale of stolen relics" China Daily February 22, 2008; updated 2009
  27. ^ Hernon, Ian. 1998. Britain's Forgotten Wars.
  28. ^ a b c Wang Daocheng (2005) in "Should Yuanmingyuan Be Rebuilt?", People's Daily Online
  29. ^ Loch, Henry Personal narrative of occurrences during Lord Elgin's second embassy to China, 1860 1869
  30. ^ Letter of Victor Hugo on the Summer Palace, website chine.in
  31. ^ Hugo, Victor. "The sack of the summer palace", UNESCO Courier. November 1985.
  32. ^ Angela Tsai, Angela et al."Splendors of a Bygone Age", 2003-01-27 at the Wayback Machine Tsu Chi Foundation.
  33. ^ "Redención", Mauricio Percara (2015), CRI español (http://espanol.cri.cn/861/2015/12/28/1s372425.htm
  34. ^ Zhao HongYi, "SongZhuang Remembers," Beijing Today (October 27, 2013): 1 [1]
  35. ^ Haiyan Lee, "The Ruins of Yuanmingyuan," Modern China 35.2 (March 1, 2009): 155-190. [2]
  36. ^ New Yuanming Palace at travelchinaguide.com
  37. ^ Bree Feng (9 February 2014). "Despite Frigid Relations, Chinese Relics Coming Home From Norway". The New York Times.
  38. ^ "Return of Old Summer Palace relics delayed". IISS. 12 January 2015.
  39. ^ "Old palace, new status - China.org.cn". www.china.org.cn.
  40. ^ "Old Summer Palace". Lonely Planet. Retrieved 15 January 2017.
  41. ^ "Portuguese Empire / China / Beijing, Xiyanglou Pavilions, Yuanmingyuan Gardens | Colonial Architecture Project". colonialarchitectureproject.org.

References

  • Lumby, E. W. R. "Lord Elgin and the Burning of the Summer Palace." History Today (July 1960) 10#7 pp 479–48.</ref>
  • Kutcher, Norman. "China's Palace of Memory," The Wilson Quarterly (Winter 2003).
  • Wong, Young-Tsu. A Paradise Lost: The Imperial Garden Yuanming Yuan. (Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 2001). ISBN 0824822269.
  • M'Ghee, Robert James Leslie. (1862). How we got to Pekin: A Narrative of the Campaign in China of 1860. London: Richard Bentley.
  • Barme, Geremie. "The Garden of Perfect Brightness: A Life in Ruins." East Asian History 11 (1996): 111–58. Web.
  • Ringmar, Erik (2013). Liberal Barbarism: The European Destruction of the Palace of the Emperor of China. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Hevia, James Louis (2003). English lessons : the pedagogy of imperialism in nineteenth-century China. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. ISBN 9780822331513.

External links

  • "Yuanming Yuan, The Garden Of Perfect Brightness" China Heritage 8 (2008).
  • China Daily story on coating of the lake beds
  • Ringmar, Erik (2013). Liberal Barbarism: The European Destruction of the Palace of the Emperor of China. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • 1860 : Yuanmingyuan great catastrophe, Bernard Briese
  • , Perry W. Ma
  • Stephen H. Whiteman, (Review) John R. Finlay, “40 Views of the Yuanming yuan”: Image and Ideology in a Qianlong Imperial Album of Poetry and Painting .

Coordinates: 40°00′26″N 116°17′33″E / 40.00722°N 116.29250°E / 40.00722; 116.29250

summer, palace, confused, with, summer, palace, also, beijing, also, known, yuanmingyuan, traditional, chinese, 圓明園, simplified, chinese, 圆明园, pinyin, yuánmíng, yuán, gardens, perfect, brightness, yuanmingyuan, park, originally, called, imperial, gardens, trad. Not to be confused with Summer Palace also in Beijing The Old Summer Palace also known as Yuanmingyuan traditional Chinese 圓明園 simplified Chinese 圆明园 pinyin Yuanming Yuan lit Gardens of Perfect Brightness or Yuanmingyuan Park 1 originally called the Imperial Gardens traditional Chinese 御園 simplified Chinese 御园 pinyin Yu Yuan and sometimes called the Winter Palace 2 3 was a complex of palaces and gardens in present day Haidian District Beijing China It is 8 kilometres 5 0 mi northwest of the walls of the former Imperial City section of Beijing Widely perceived as the pinnacle work of Chinese imperial garden and palace design the Old Summer Palace was known for its extensive collection of gardens its building architecture and numerous art and historical treasures Constructed throughout the 18th and early 19th centuries the Old Summer Palace was the main imperial residence of Qianlong Emperor of the Qing dynasty and his successors and where they handled state affairs the Forbidden City was used for formal ceremonies The Garden was reputed as the Garden of Gardens simplified Chinese 万园之园 traditional Chinese 萬園之園 pinyin wan yuan zhi yuan in its heyday was Arguably the greatest concentration of historic treasures in the world dating and representing a full 5 000 years of an ancient civilization said Robert McGee chaplain to the British forces Old Summer PalaceSimplified Chinese圆明园Traditional Chinese圓明園Literal meaningGardens of Perfect BrightnessTranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinYuanming YuanImperial GardensSimplified Chinese御园Traditional Chinese御園TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinYu YuanDuring the Second Opium War French and British troops captured the palace on 6 October 1860 looting and destroying the imperial collections over the next few days 4 5 As news emerged that an Anglo French delegation had been imprisoned and tortured by the Qing government with 19 delegation members being killed 6 the British High Commissioner to China James Bruce 8th Earl of Elgin retaliated by ordering the complete destruction of the palace on 18 October which was then carried out by troops under his command 5 The palace was so large covering more than 3 5 square kilometres 860 acres that it took 4 000 men three days to destroy it 7 Many exquisite artworks sculptures porcelain jade silk robes elaborate textiles gold objects and more were looted and are now located in 47 museums around the world according to UNESCO 8 Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Location 1 2 Western mansions 2 History 3 Destruction 4 Aftermath 5 Recent developments and plans 6 Transport 7 Gallery 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksOverview Edit The Imperial Gardens as they once stood Plan of the Old Summer Palace The Imperial Gardens at the Old Summer Palace were made up of three gardens Garden of Perfect Brightness 圆明园 圓明園 Yuanming Yuan Garden of Eternal Spring 长春园 長春園 Changchun Yuan Garden of Elegant Spring 绮春园 綺春園 Qǐchun Yuan Together they covered an area of 3 5 square kilometres 860 acres almost five times the size of the Forbidden City grounds and eight times the size of the Vatican City Hundreds of structures such as halls pavilions temples galleries gardens lakes and bridges stood on the grounds In addition hundreds of examples of Chinese artwork and antiquities were stored in the halls along with unique copies of literary works and compilations Several famous landscapes of southern China had been reproduced in the Imperial Gardens Location Edit The palace was built on a site abundant in fresh water near the Jade Spring Hill The region was renowned for its beautiful landscape Country homes were built here beginning in the 13th century during the rule of the Yuan dynasty then in the 16th century Li Wei of the Ming Dynasty built the Qinghua Yuan estate at the site 9 Western mansions Edit Main article Xiyang Lou The most visible architectural remains of the Old Summer Palace can be found in the Western mansions Xiyang Lou section of 18th century European style palaces fountains and formal gardens These structures built partly of stone but mainly with a Chinese infrastructure of timber columns coloured tiles and brick walls were planned and designed by the Jesuit Giuseppe Castiglione with Michel Benoist responsible for the fountains and waterwork Qianlong Emperor became interested in the architectural project after seeing an engraving of a European fountain and employed Castiglione and Benoist to carry out the work to satisfy his taste for exotic buildings and objects 10 Western style palaces pavilion aviaries a maze fountains basins and waterworks as well as perspective paintings organized as an outdoor theatre stage were constructed A striking clock fountain was placed in front of the largest palace the Haiyan Tang The fountain had twelve animals of the Chinese zodiac that spouted water in turn every 2 hours but all spouting water in concert at noon 10 These European style buildings however only occupied an area along the back of the Garden of Eternal Spring that was small compared to the overall area of the gardens More than 95 of the Imperial Gardens were made up of Chinese style buildings There were also a few buildings in Tibetan and Mongol styles reflecting the diversity of the Qing Empire History Edit Forty Scenes of the Yuanmingyuan Old Summer Palace historic drawing Initial construction of the Old Summer Palace began in 1707 during the reign of the Kangxi Emperor It was intended as a gift for the emperor s fourth son Prince Yong the future Yongzheng Emperor who would greatly expand the Imperial Gardens in 1725 The Yongzheng Emperor also introduced the waterworks of the gardens creating lakes streams and ponds to complement the rolling hills and grounds and named 28 scenic spots within the garden The Yongzheng Emperor also constructed a number of living tableaux he and his family could observe and interact with One such scene was called Crops as Plentiful as Fields which involved court eunuchs pretending to be rural farmers on an island 11 Another was called the Courtyard of Universal Happiness which was a mock village where the imperial family could interact with shopkeepers again eunuchs in disguise 11 During the Qianlong Emperor s reign the second expansion was well underway and the number of scenic spots increased to 50 the emperor personally directed the construction process The splendors of the palace and the grounds were depicted in the Forty Scenes of the Yuanmingyuan an album produced in 1744 by the Qianlong Emperor s court painters 12 The construction of the European style palaces was initiated in 1747 The last European appearance in the Old Summer Palace in the context of traditional Chinese imperial foreign relations was a diplomatic mission in 1795 representing the interests of the Dutch and Dutch East India Company 13 The Titsingh delegation included Isaac Titsingh 14 the Dutch American Andreas Everardus van Braam Houckgeest 15 and the Frenchman Chretien Louis Joseph de Guignes 16 Both published complementary accounts of the mission Titsingh died before he could publish his version of the events Destruction EditMain article Second Opium War Second phase Looting of the Old Summer Palace by Anglo French forces in 1860 during the Second Opium War Ruins of the Old Summer Palace 1870s Drawing of formal European gardens in the Xiyang Lou 西洋樓 Western mansions section Ruins of the European style palaces The original figures in a drawing before the looting with all 12 head figures of the Old Summer Palace fountain In 1860 during the Second Opium War a combined Anglo French expeditionary forces having marched inland from the coast at Tianjin Tientsin arrived in Beijing Peking citation needed In mid September two envoys Henry Loch and Harry Parkes went ahead of the main force under a flag of truce to negotiate with Prince Yi and representatives of the Qing Empire at Tongzhou Tungchow and to scout out campsites behind enemy lines The delegation included Thomas William Bowlby a journalist for The Times along with a small escort of British and Indian soldiers As the talks concluded on 18 September the Allied forces attacked Qing troops in the area who they believed were redeploying for an ambush and the Qing court learned that the British had detained the prefect of Tianjin It was around this time that the Qing general Sengge Rinchen took the members of the delegation prisoner as they were traversing Qing lines to return to the expeditionary forces The delegates and their escort were taken to the Ministry of Justice or Board of Punishments in Beijing where they were confined and tortured Parkes and Loch were returned after two weeks with 14 other survivors Nineteen British French and Indian captives died as a result of the torture 17 18 19 On the night of 5 October French units diverted from the main attack force towards the Old Summer Palace At the time the palace was occupied by only some eunuchs and palace maids the Xianfeng Emperor and his entourage had already fled to the Chengde Mountain Resort in Hebei Although the French commander Charles Cousin Montauban assured his British counterpart James Hope Grant that nothing had been touched extensive looting of the palace had already been carried out by Allied soldiers 20 There was no significant resistance to the looting even though many Qing soldiers were in the vicinity 20 On October 18 Lord Elgin the British High Commissioner to China retaliated against the torture of the delegation members by ordering the destruction of the Old Summer Palace 21 Destroying the Old Summer Palace was also a warning to the Qing Empire not to use kidnapping as a political tactic against Britain 22 It took 3 500 British troops to set the entire place ablaze and the massive fire lasted for three days Unbeknownst to the troops some 300 remaining eunuchs and palace maids who concealed themselves from the soldiers in locked rooms perished when the palace complex was burnt Only 13 buildings survived intact most of them in the remote areas or by the lakeside The palace would be sacked once again and completely destroyed in 1900 when the forces of the Eight Nation Alliance invaded Beijing 23 Charles George Gordon who was then a 27 year old captain in the Royal Engineers and part of the 1860 Anglo French expeditionary force wrote about his experience We went out and after pillaging it burned the whole place destroying in a vandal like manner most valuable property which could not be replaced for four millions We got upward of 48 apiece prize money I have done well The local people are very civil but I think the grandees hate us as they must after what we did the Palace You can scarcely imagine the beauty and magnificence of the places we burnt It made one s heart sore to burn them in fact these places were so large and we were so pressed for time that we could not plunder them carefully Quantities of gold ornaments were burnt considered as brass It was wretchedly demoralising work for an army 24 British and French soldiers preferred porcelain while neglecting bronze vessels prized locally for cooking and burial in tombs 25 Many such treasures dated back to the Shang Zhou and Han dynasties and were up to 3 600 years old A specific exception was the looting of the Haiyantang Zodiac fountain with its twelve bronze animal heads 26 Some of the most notable treasures ended up at the Chinese Museum in the Palace of Fontainebleau which Empress Eugenie specifically set up in 1867 to house these newly acquired collections Ruins of Yuanmingyuan open area tourist map Once the Old Summer Palace had been reduced a sign was raised by the Allied expeditionary force with an inscription in Chinese stating This is the reward for perfidy and cruelty The burning of the palace was the last act of the war 27 According to Professor Wang Daocheng of the Renmin University of China not all of the palace was destroyed in the original burning 28 Instead some historical records indicate that 16 of the garden scenes survived the destruction in 1860 28 Wang identifies the Republican era and the Cultural Revolution as two significant periods that contributed further to the destruction of the Old Summer Palace 28 Photographic evidence and eyewitness accounts make it clear that although the palace complex was initially protected by the Qing emperors it was during the Boxer Rebellion and in the immediate aftermath of the fall of the dynasty when most of the surviving structures were destroyed Further the Imperial household itself sold off the magnificent trees in the garden for revenue during the 1890s and after 1900 the palace was used as a veritable builder s yard for anyone who wanted construction materials Entire buildings were built of materials taken from the Yuanming Yuan and smart Peking houses were adorned with sculptures and architectural elements plundered from the site Like the Forbidden City no commoner had ever been allowed into the Old Summer Palace as it was used exclusively by the imperial family of the Qing Empire 29 The burning of the Old Summer Palace is still a very sensitive issue in China today 25 The destruction of the palace has been perceived as barbaric and criminal by many Chinese as well as by external observers In his Expedition de Chine Victor Hugo described the looting as Two robbers breaking into a museum One has looted the other has burnt one of the two conquerors filled its pockets seing that the other filled its safes and they came back to Europe laughing hand in hand Before history one of the bandits will be called France and the other England 30 31 In his letter Hugo hoped that one day France would feel guilty and return what it had plundered from China 32 Mauricio Percara journalist and Argentine writer who works at China Radio International talks about the apology through the literature by Victor Hugo and mentioned in his story entitled redemption the bust of the French writer located in the old Summer Palace at the site where their French peers ever posed his destructive feet today a radiant bust of the great Victor Hugo rises From the old Summer Palace the gardens of perfect brightness a righteous French poses her look of stone in the snow falling obediently on the worn floor of the capital of the North 33 Aftermath Edit The pavilion and the stone arch are among the few remaining buildings in the Old Summer Palace Following the sacking of the Old Summer Palace the Qing imperial court relocated to the Forbidden City In 1873 the teenage Tongzhi Emperor attempted to rebuild the Old Summer Palace on the pretext of turning it into a place of retirement for his two former regents the empress dowagers Ci an and Cixi However the imperial court lacked the financial resources to rebuild the palace and at the urging of the court the emperor finally agreed to stop the project in 1874 During the 1880s an adjacent imperial gardens the Gardens of Clear Ripples the present day Summer Palace was restored for the use of Empress Dowager Cixi as a new summer resort albeit on a smaller scale A few Chinese style buildings in the outlying Elegant Spring Garden also survived the fire Some of these buildings were restored by the Tongzhi Emperor before the project was abandoned In 1900 many of the buildings that had survived or had been restored were burnt for good by the forces of the Eight Nation Alliance Most of the site was left abandoned and used by local farmers as agricultural land Only in the 1980s was the site reclaimed by the government and turned into a historical site The Yuanmingyuan Artists Colony became famous for germinating a new wave of painters such as Fang Lijun and musicians such as Fa Zi on the site before it was shut down by the government and many artists relocated to the Songzhuang area outside of Beijing 34 Debates in the 1990s arose regarding restoration and development issues and a more recent environmental controversy brought a new political life to the park as it became a symbol of China s national wound 35 In the present day the ruins of the European style palaces are the most prominent building remnants on the site This has misled some visitors to believe wrongly that the Old Summer Palace was made up only of European style buildings Recent developments and plans Edit Haiyantang Water Clock Fountain The original figures in a drawing before the looting with all 12 head figures eight of the 12 figures have been recovered four are still missing The site of the water Fountain in 2012 Replicas of the 12 heads Parts of the Zhengjue Temple 正觉寺 of Elegant Spring Garden are being refurbished Entrance to the Yuanmingyuan Park site of the original gate to the Elegant Spring Garden There are currently several plans in China for rebuilding the Imperial Gardens but such moves have been opposed on the grounds that they will destroy an important relic of modern Chinese history In addition any rebuilding would be a colossal undertaking and no rebuilding of above the ground structures has been approved However the lakes and waterways in the eastern half of the gardens have been dug up again and refilled with water while hills around the lakes have been cleared of brushwood recreating long forgotten vistas Several temples located inside the Old Summer Palace grounds have also been refurbished and rebuilt In February 2005 work was undertaken to reduce water loss from the lakes and canals in the Old Summer Palace by covering a total of 1 33 square kilometres 0 51 sq mi of the beds with a membrane to reduce seepage The park administration argued the prevention of water loss saves the park money since water would have to be added to the lakes only once per year instead of three times However opponents of the project such as Professor Zhengchun Zhang of Lanzhou University feared the measure will destroy the ecology of the park which depends on the water seepage from the lakes and the connection between the lakes and the underground water system It is also feared the reduced seepage from the lakes will disturb Beijing s underground water system which is already suffering from depletion There are also concerns about the gardens which is a designated heritage site in the city of Beijing changing their natural appearance This issue when brought up with the general public several weeks later immediately caused an uproar from the press and became one of the hottest debates on the Internet in China due to the still painful memory of foreign humiliation epitomised in the destruction of the Old Summer Palace The Beijing Environmental Protection Bureau BEPB recently when conducted an assessment of the environmental impact of the measure A partial copy of the palace the New Yuanming Gardens 圆明新园 圓明新園 was built in 1997 in the southern city of Zhuhai in Guangdong province as an amusement park of 1 39 square kilometres 0 54 sq mi including an 80 000 square metres 860 000 sq ft lake 36 Up to the present many relics which were taken from the Old Summer Palace remain in foreign museums and private collections Although the Chinese government has tried to recover them only a few statuettes from the Garden of Eternal Spring have actually been returned Seven of the 21 columns displayed at the KODE Art Museums in Bergen Norway were returned to Peking University in 2014 as part of a deal set up by alumnus Huang Nubo a real estate developer who donated 10 million Norwegian kroner US 1 6 million to the museum according to the China Daily 37 38 It is still debated in China whether to apply for an inclusion of the Old Summer Palace on the list of UNESCO World Heritage Sites 39 Transport EditThe ruins of the Old Summer Palace remain open to the public and are an important tourist attraction in Haidian District 40 the Yuanmingyuan Park 1 They can be accessed from Yuanmingyuan Park station on Line 4 of the Beijing Subway Gallery EditHundreds more photographs of the site can be found on the website Colonial Architecture Project 41 Front Lake of Jiuzhou 九州前湖 on the other side of the lake lies the site of Jiuzhou Qingyan 九洲清晏 Apricot Blossom Spring Villa 杏花春馆 Ruins of The Magnanimous World 坦坦荡荡 Ruyi Bridge 如意桥 in Yuanmingyuan Fuhai Lake 福海 south bank 夹镜鸣琴 A stoneboat in the Yuanmingyuan 别有洞天 Ruins of Hanjingtang 含经堂 Yuanyingguan 远瀛观 Ruins North side Historic drawing of Haiyantang 海晏堂 Ruins of Haiyantang Ruins of the Fangwaiguan 方外观 Restored Huanghuazhen 黄花阵 万花阵 in the Western Mansions 西洋楼 area Belvedere of the God of Literature Summer Palace Beijing 6 18 October 1860 Porcelain Tower Summer Palace Beijing 6 18 October 1860 Great Imperial Porcelain Palace Summer Palace Beijing 6 18 October 1860 Summer Palace Beijing 6 18 October 1860 Pagoda at Old Summer Palace Yu chuan Shan Summer Palace Beijing 6 18 October 1860See also EditXiyang Lou Western mansion Haiyantang Water clock fountain History of Beijing Flashman and the Dragon historical fiction based on the events around the destruction of 1860 Century of humiliationNotes Edit a b Yuanmingyuan Park official website yuanmingyuanpark cn Archived from the original on 2021 05 08 ZHANG Ming jian 2007 Impact of English on Chinese mainland From historical educational and political dimensions PDF US China Education Review p 62 Retrieved 13 January 2021 Dagu Fort Top China Travel Retrieved 13 January 2021 Ringmar 2013 p 6 a b Bowlby Chris 2 February 2015 The palace of shame that makes China angry BBC News Retrieved 28 February 2015 Hevia 2003 p 47 The loot from China s old Summer Palace in Beijing that still rankles Oxford Today www oxfordtoday ox ac uk Archived from the original on 2018 04 17 Retrieved 2018 06 30 张行健 Old Summer Palace marks 157th anniversary of massive loot www chinadaily com cn Retrieved 2018 06 30 Wong Young Tsu Paradise Lost The Imperial Garden Yuanming Yuan University of Hawai i Press p 25 a b Marco Musillo 2011 Mid Qing Arts and Jesuit Visions Encounters and Exchanges in Eighteenth Century Beijing In Susan Delson ed Ai Weiwei Circle of Animals Prestel Publishing pp 146 161 a b Barme Geremie June 1996 The Garden of Perfect Brightness a Life in Ruins PDF East Asian History Retrieved 13 March 2016 Lillian M Li The 40 Scenes MIT Visualizing Culture O Neil Patricia O 1995 Missed Opportunities Late 18th Century Chinese Relations with England and the Netherlands Ph D dissertation University of Washington Duyvendak J J L 1937 The Last Dutch Embassy to the Chinese Court 1794 1795 T oung Pao 33 1 137 van Braam Houckgeest Andreas Everardus 1797 Voyage de l ambassade de la Compagnie des Indes Orientales hollandaises vers l empereur de la Chine dans les annees 1794 et 1795 see also 1798 English translation An authentic account of the embassy of the Dutch East India company to the court of the emperor of China in the years 1974 and 1795 Vol I Archived 2009 02 15 at the Wayback Machine de Guignes Chretien Louis Joseph 1808 Voyage a Pekin Manille et l Ile de France Ringmar 2013 pp 78 79 Wong 2001 p 136 Hevia 2003 p 45 47 a b M Ghee Robert 1862 How we got to Pekin A Narrative of the Campaign in China of 1860 pp 202 216 E W R Lumby Lord Elgin and the Burning of the Summer Palace History Today July 1960 10 7 pp 479 48 Endacott G B 2005 1962 A biographical sketch book of early Hong Kong Hong Kong University Press ISBN 978 962 209 742 1 火燒圓明園 Huoshao Yuanmingyuan Burning the Yuanmingyuan China com Hake Alfred Egmont 1884 The Story of Chinese Gordon Vol 1 3rd ed London England Remington and Co p 33 a b Chris Bowlby 2 February 2015 The palace of shame that makes China angry BBC Chinese lawyers apply for injunction to stop sale of stolen relics China Daily February 22 2008 updated 2009 Hernon Ian 1998 Britain s Forgotten Wars a b c Wang Daocheng 2005 in Should Yuanmingyuan Be Rebuilt People s Daily Online Loch Henry Personal narrative of occurrences during Lord Elgin s second embassy to China 1860 1869 Letter of Victor Hugo on the Summer Palace website chine in Hugo Victor The sack of the summer palace UNESCO Courier November 1985 Angela Tsai Angela et al Splendors of a Bygone Age Archived 2003 01 27 at the Wayback Machine Tsu Chi Foundation Redencion Mauricio Percara 2015 CRI espanol http espanol cri cn 861 2015 12 28 1s372425 htm Zhao HongYi SongZhuang Remembers Beijing Today October 27 2013 1 1 Haiyan Lee The Ruins of Yuanmingyuan Modern China 35 2 March 1 2009 155 190 2 New Yuanming Palace at travelchinaguide com Bree Feng 9 February 2014 Despite Frigid Relations Chinese Relics Coming Home From Norway The New York Times Return of Old Summer Palace relics delayed IISS 12 January 2015 Old palace new status China org cn www china org cn Old Summer Palace Lonely Planet Retrieved 15 January 2017 Portuguese Empire China Beijing Xiyanglou Pavilions Yuanmingyuan Gardens Colonial Architecture Project colonialarchitectureproject org References EditLumby E W R Lord Elgin and the Burning of the Summer Palace History Today July 1960 10 7 pp 479 48 lt ref gt Kutcher Norman China s Palace of Memory The Wilson Quarterly Winter 2003 Wong Young Tsu A Paradise Lost The Imperial Garden Yuanming Yuan Honolulu University of Hawai i Press 2001 ISBN 0824822269 M Ghee Robert James Leslie 1862 How we got to Pekin A Narrative of the Campaign in China of 1860 London Richard Bentley Barme Geremie The Garden of Perfect Brightness A Life in Ruins East Asian History 11 1996 111 58 Web Ringmar Erik 2013 Liberal Barbarism The European Destruction of the Palace of the Emperor of China New York Palgrave Macmillan Hevia James Louis 2003 English lessons the pedagogy of imperialism in nineteenth century China Durham NC Duke University Press ISBN 9780822331513 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Old Summer Palace category Yuanming Yuan The Garden Of Perfect Brightness China Heritage 8 2008 Official site China Daily story on coating of the lake beds Ringmar Erik 2013 Liberal Barbarism The European Destruction of the Palace of the Emperor of China New York Palgrave Macmillan 1860 Yuanmingyuan great catastrophe Bernard Briese China s view of Europe A Changing Perspective Perry W Ma Stephen H Whiteman Review John R Finlay 40 Views of the Yuanming yuan Image and Ideology in a Qianlong Imperial Album of Poetry and Painting Dissertation Reviews Coordinates 40 00 26 N 116 17 33 E 40 00722 N 116 29250 E 40 00722 116 29250 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Old Summer Palace amp oldid 1135022038, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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