Forbidden No More
As Beijing gets ready to host its first Olympics, a veteran journalist returns to its once-restricted palace complex
- By Paul Raffaele
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2008, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
In this square, on ceremonial days, a royal deputy would command tens of thousands of courtiers and military officers to ke tou to the emperor, seated out of sight in the main hall. The massed subjects would fall to their knees and bow their heads to the pavement nine times.
In 1793, Britain's first envoy to China, Lord Macartney, arrived to negotiate a trade treaty, bearing such gifts as air guns, a 25-foot-tall clock, a hot air balloon, telescopes and a planetarium. But when he was presented to Emperor Qianlong, he declined to "kowtow"—to do so, he felt, would demean Britain's ruling king, George III. After several meetings at which the emperor declined to talk business, he sent Macartney packing with a note: "We have never valued ingenious articles, nor do we have the slightest need of your country's manufactures," it read. "Our Celestial Empire possesses all things in prolific abundance and lacks no product within its own borders. There was therefore no need to import the manufactures of outside barbarians in exchange for our own produce."
It was under Qianlong, who reigned from the 1730s to the 1790s, that China extended its rule west to what is now Xinjiang province and south to Tibet, doubling its territory and becoming the world's richest and most populous nation. He appointed the Tibetan religious leader, the Dalai Lama, as a tributary ruler and protected him with Chinese troops. "Qianlong was not only a great warrior, but also a great painter and poet," says Yuan Hongqi, a deputy director of the Palace Museum. "He's my favorite emperor."
Mine, too. When he was 65, Qianlong finished building a retirement palace and garden of his own design, but he held on to the throne for another 20 years. As it happens, during my visit the Palace Museum and the World Monuments Fund announce a major restoration of the garden with help from Smithsonian Museum Conservation Institute experts, to be completed in 2016.
The Hall of Supreme Harmony, where emperors conducted affairs of state, is by general consent the most magnificent building in all of the Forbidden City. In constructing it, its builders relied on cosmology and feng shui (literally, "wind and water"), the belief that orientation and environment wield good and bad influences. The builders also believed the numbers nine and five to be auspicious. So the trained eye sees many combinations of nine, from passageways leading to squares, to golden knobs decorating giant doors—nine across, nine down—to the famed Nine Dragon Screen. (And remember those 9,999 rooms?) Erected in 1771, the screen is 95 feet long and 12 feet high. Its 270 glazed tiles form nine five-clawed dragons set against a backdrop of roiling clouds and sea. "Five is important because it's midway between one and nine," says Professor Yang. "So the imperial dragons have five claws, while all other dragons have three."
The dragon represented imperial traits: benevolence, excellence, boldness, heroism, perseverance, nobility and divinity. And so dragons are everywhere. Two perch on the roof of the Hall of Supreme Harmony, and 1,142 marble dragons' heads disguise the downspouts at its base. A marble ramp carved with dragons leads to the hall, where there are more dragons inside—13,844, to be precise—adorning columns, screens, walls, eaves and ceiling. More still run rampant over the Dragon Throne, while above it a painted dragon plays with a giant mock pearl. When I ask Li Ji, the Palace Museum's executive deputy director, just how many dragons there are in the Forbidden City, he gestures helplessly. "Too many to count," he says.
Beyond two other impressive pavilions—the Hall of Central Harmony and the Hall of Preserving Harmony—a pair of golden lions stand guard at the Gate of Heavenly Purity, the entrance to the emperor's private quarters, which is surrounded by high red walls. Next to the entranceway I see, improbably, a Starbucks in a building in which officials once waited to see the emperor. (The coffee emporium has since closed, after a Chinese blogger stoked widespread opposition to the franchise.) More modest pavilions once housed imperial concubines.
"The emperor chose his night companion from nameplates presented to him by a eunuch," says Yuan. A high-ranking eunuch, the Chief of the Imperial Bedchamber, would remove the woman's clothes to ensure that she carried no weapons or poisons, roll her up in a quilt and carry her on his back through the courtyards to the emperor.
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Comments (3)
what is forbidden no more, but it really is an interesting topic..........
Posted by shanautica ford on February 2,2011 | 02:18 PM
Twilight in the Forbidden City has been republished with all the original photographs and a bonus previously unpublished chapter of Johnston's meeting with the 13th Dalai Lama...
Great price at Amazon.com!
http://www.amazon.com/Twilight-Forbidden-City-Illustrated-revised/dp/0968045952/
A great read especially if you are interested in China!
Posted by Mark on April 17,2009 | 02:07 AM
I am sorry that potted histories like this one by Mr Raffaele will proliferate during the Olympic year in Beijing. What does it matter how many dragons were depicted throughout the Forbidden City? An irrelevance that the Palace Museum's Li Ji was right to shrug off. The Palace is extraordinary and its spaces and buildings among the most beautiful in the world. Fortunately my childhood home alongside ChingShan and opposite the northern gate of the Forbidden City, was close enough to allow me to explore it often as a child, between the years 1943 and 1949. Although Beijing was then occupied by the Japanese, the guards ignored me and I could wander there with my minder. It is indeed different now and has lost its silent splendor, becoming an entertainment centre. It has not been restored, it is being re-stroyed. Neither will Raffaele's journalistic facts and figures enlighten serious people. I strongly recommend reading Reginald F. Johnston's "Twilight in the Forbidden City" He was Emperor Puyi's tutor and spent years there when the place was still Imperial.
Posted by D'Alpoim Guedes on July 20,2008 | 11:29 PM
I really want to go to China this summer 4 u know what! This article was great! :) :]
Posted by Meg on March 10,2008 | 09:37 AM
I have been there twice with my Chinese wife.I am always amazed at the wonder of the Forbidden City,The stories about the Dragon Lady are great.As her 6 year old son ruled China she sat behind a silk certain and listened if she did not agree with the visitor she pulled a rope that was attached to a sword above the visitors head, consealed amongst silk scarves at the top of the tall ceiling.The visitor had to stand in a square marked on the floor in order to speak to the Emperor,this square was dead center of the swords drop. I wonder how many met there fate standing in that tiny square on the floor?? Robert Schlund & Lian Wen Ling Chongqing,China
Posted by Robert Schlund on March 10,2008 | 09:27 AM
I belive that it is wonderful that they are opening the forbindden city to the public. There is much history there that can be scholers can use to find more out about Chian magnificent past and if should be shared with the people of Chian after all it is there history and anserty to.
Posted by Emma Rose on February 26,2008 | 02:41 PM