The Summer Palace  (late 18th century onward)     other sites in Beijing    Beijing, China


Click on the arrows for select views from that location.  Additional images below.
Image scanned from the 1997 Beijing Tourist map.

                                                                                                                                                                                        
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The Summer Palace is an excellent place to cool off during Beijing's hot Summer months. As it's name implies, it was used as a summer residence by China's Imperial rulers.  The Palace began to assume its present shape during the reign of Emperor Qianlong who ruled in the late 18th century.  Using an army of 100,000 laborers, the Emperor enlarged and deepened the lake, creating a network of small islands connected by dikes doubling as bridges. The layout is inspired by Taoist legends of immortal islands in the middle of misty lakes—the Chinese version of the Fountain of Youth myth.

The Dowager empress Cixi took an interest in the palace at the end of the 19th century.  Using embezzled funds from the Imperial Navy, she restored a marble boat permanently moored at the lakeside, and rebuilt the halls beginning in 1888.  Unfortunately, most of the complex was burned to the ground in an unwarranted display of foreign aggression by Anglo-French forces reacting to the Boxer Rebellion of 1900.

The palace rotted for nearly fifty years, when it was restored soon after the Communist takeover.  Nowadays most of the buildings have been completely restored, including a pleasant Southern Chinese shopping area at the north end of the palace, where once only the Emperors could shop.

One of the best ways to experience the park is to rent a paddle boat at the lakeside. There are no restrictions on where you can row, and it is fun to try to paddle beneath the seventeen-arch bridge.  The current near there is so strong that only the hardiest paddlers can get through.



Entry tickets to the Summer Palace.

Bibliography:
   All images copyright 1998-2001 Abe Ahn, Tim Ciccone
   Storey, Robert.  Beijing, Lonely Planet City Guide
       Lonely Planet Publications.  Hong Kong.  1996

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