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#WPLongform, Beijing, Chinese emperors, concubines, eunuchs, Forbidden City, Forbidden City daily life, Imperial life, photography, Tiananmen Square, travel
20 May 2018.
For a start it’s huge! Within the walls there are 980 separate buildings with over 8700 rooms. The entire complex covers over 180 acres, which is the size of about 136 football fields. The enclosing rectangular wall is eight metres high and beyond that is a moat six metres wide and 52 metres deep. It is both forbidden and forbidding. For hundreds of years it was the closely guarded enclave of a very select few, catering to the whims and wishes of the most important person in the land.
Even the numbers of the select few are astonishing. At one point up to 70,000 eunuchs. Up to 3000 concubines. Hundreds of servants, 200 in the kitchens alone. All for the empress, the Dowager empress, and the only male living within the walls capable of procreating, the emperor, ruler of all China.
My exploration of the legendary Forbidden City is one of gradually unfolding awe.
We start the day early, grabbing some really good dumplings for breakfast that we eat as we make our way walking and then by local bus to Tiananmen Square, that most famous of vast public squares, all 109 acres of it.
The only thing I know about Tiananmen Square is a picture of a man standing in front of a tank that became the international symbol for the uprising of 1989, so the flower beds surprise me. I was expecting something much more austere.
After the death of Hu Yaobang, who was working within the government to move China towards a more democratic system, thousands of students gathered in Tiananmen Square on April 15 to mourn him. Over the next several weeks the number of people gathering in the square in support of reformation swelled to 1.2 million. It ended on June 4 with troops firing on the demonstrators. No official death toll has ever been released. Estimates range from hundreds to thousands.
Today Tiananmen Square is a benign place, but almost equally as crowded – with the thousands of domestic tourists who pour from countless tour buses, and a very few small groups of foreigners, like us on a three-week trip through China with Intrepid Travel.
Most of the tourists are Chinese who have come to see the iconic places of their capital. Tiananmen Square is of great cultural significant to the Chinese as the site of many important events in China’s history including the proclamation by Mao Zedong of the formation of the People’s Republic of China in 1949.
It is surrounded on two sides by large non-descript buildings, and at the south end by Mao’s equally non-descript mausoleum. It’s the north end that interests me. Here is the eponymous Tiananmen, the Gate of Heavenly Peace, hung with Mao’s portrait and guarded by living statues, one in blue, one in white. It is the entrance to the entrance to the Forbidden City: Tiananmen is the gate to the Imperial City within which the Forbidden City is located.
Passing through Tiananmen Gate I look back towards Mao’s Mausoleum.
Looking forward there is a broad royal street of grey flagstones, flanked by numerous buildings in the same traditional style, and broken about two-thirds of the way down by Duanmen Gate, similar to Tiananmen but smaller. Passing through the tunnel of Duanmen we eventually reach the massive and imposing U-shaped Meridian Gate.
This is the entrance to the Forbidden City. The moat ends on either side of these great towering walls. We pass through it and on the other side we cross the Golden Water River on a curved bridge of white marble
to see yet another gate. It is the Gate of Supreme Harmony guarded by two enormous lions.
and through it we can see ahead of us, beyond a vast open space used for royal ceremonial parades, the Hall of Supreme Harmony.
Beyond the Hall of Supreme Harmony is the Hall of Central Harmony, and beyond that the Hall of Preserving Harmony. And all this is only the central axis and the outer palace. There are multiple buildings and expansive courtyards beyond, and off to both sides.
There are enormous brass water urns,
and grand statues of lions, peacocks, a deer side-by-side with a dragon, cranes, anatomically impossible elephants, and a dragon-headed turtle.
Each building has exquisite decorative details
and fits harmoniously with the whole, which is perhaps more than can be said for life inside the walls of the city during the 500 years it was the hub of a vast bureaucratic government, a ritual and ceremonial space, and the home of the emperor and his household.
The Forbidden City was constructed from 1406 to 1420 by more than a million of the minions of Emperor Yong Le. An unmatched example of traditional Chinese palatial architecture, it is the largest ancient palatial structure in the world. It was the home of twenty-four emperors, fourteen of the Ming Dynasty and ten of the Qing Dynasty. It ended in 1912 with the abdication of Pu Yi, the last emperor, and is now a vast museum frequented by as many people today as it was during the 500 years of its glory days.
Today, as a result of China’s burgeoning middle class, there are crowds of tourists who come by the busload to see the glories and ancient wonders of their homeland. Because it is so big there are areas that are quite empty.
Other areas, particularly the tunnels through the gates, become bottlenecks as thousands make their way from south to north.
Those who crowd the city today are free to come and go, unlike those who lived there during olden times. The emperor’s titles included Son of Heaven. Lord of Ten Thousand Years. Holy Highness. Heaven’s powers were granted him. In other words, he was a god. His words were deemed holy and were to be obeyed immediately. Yet he was not free. Life inside the walls of the Forbidden City was no picnic, not for anybody, and no one was free. All were bound by the impossible, and impossibly absurd, minutiae of tradition and internal politics.
Let’s start with the eunuchs. Here’s a pretty story. Apart from emissaries and officials of government who could enter the city on business, and then were no doubt escorted out again as soon as that business was concluded, the only man living within the walls of the city capable of bearing a child was the emperor. I guess he didn’t want any competition, and it certainly ensured the legitimacy of the emperor’s offspring.
There’s conflicting information about how the eunuchs became eunuchs. Mostly they were recruited as children though sometimes men in dire circumstances would offer up their manhood, so to speak, for a steady job. Some sources say all three of their um . . . jewels were cut off, some say only two. One account that gave illustrations of the surgical procedure where all three were removed explained how the wound was dressed and healed, though naturally there was some loss of bladder control leading to the expression “as smelly as a eunuch”. Ewwwww. This is probably more than you’ve ever wanted to know about eunuchs. You’re welcome.
Some of the eunuchs in the inner circle became very powerful since they knew all the details of the emperor’s life, and no doubt used that position to their advantage. Some became rich. Here’s one example of how:
In one of those grand palatial structures mentioned above the emperor would hold court every day sitting on one of several very elaborate thrones found throughout the complex.
Here those who had business with him, emissaries and administrators, the highest mandarins in the land, would present themselves. But first they had to kowtow, as in kneel down and literally bang their head on the floor. Nine times. The louder the noise they made banging their head, the greater the indication of their respect and obeisance to the emperor. (I’m shaking my head in incredulity about now.) Anyway under the floor in certain places there were inverted ceramic jars creating a hollow space. Banging your head on a hollow space makes way more noise than on a solid space. Certain eunuchs knew where the jars were. For a discreet fee he would tell you where.
This is the throne in the Hall of Heavenly Purity.
Mirrors were placed on either side to ward off evil.
I’m tickled by the names of the buildings; they seem so absurdly fanciful and optimistic: the Gate of Divine Might, the Hall of Military Eminence, the Hall of Heavenly Purity, the Hall of Literary Glory, the Hall of Literary Profundity, the Palace of Prolonging Happiness, the Hall of Earthly tranquillity, the Palace of Eternal Spring, the Hall of Mental Cultivation, the Hall of Celestial and Terrestrial Union, the Palace of Tranquil Longevity, the Temple of Food and the Spirit.
The inner court, the northern half of the Forbidden City, beyond the Hall of Preserving Harmony, is a rabbit warren of halls and pavilions, symmetrically and systematically arranged behind walled courts, one inside the other like a jigsaw puzzle or maze, that one must find one’s way through very carefully. At the end there is a surprising, beautifully landscaped, formal garden.
It’s easy to become bewildered, overwhelmed by the many directions available to explore.
It’s a labyrinth of secrets and lies and red “prison” walls where all had a part to play and any deviation was severely punished. That was one way, I suppose, of preserving harmony. Run-away eunuchs, concubines, or servants were always captured, if they could ever even find their way out. It is here within these walls that the Emperor, the Son of Heaven, lived in lavish isolation.
Today the area houses the Clock Exhibition Hall,
the Treasure Exhibition Hall,
and the opportunity for tourists to clothe themselves or their children in the finery of ancient China and sit on a splendid golden throne.
The inner court housed the servants and the concubines. At one point there were as many as 3000 concubines. Physical beauty and perfection of both face and body was paramount. Once in the Forbidden City they were trained in correct behaviour and in some of the arts such as music and painting, and carefully vetted before being allowed to come into the presence of the emperor. Each one had to spend a night (or more?) sleeping with the head concubine to be sure she did not snore or emit any odours while sleeping. No farting in front of the emperor please! Finally, if a concubine was chosen for the night she would be bathed and perfumed, dressed in a single yellow robe, and carried, since she could barely walk on her bound feet, to the emperor’s bedchamber. One emperor was said to have five at a time, one had them lined up outside on cots, and one had so many in one night that he expired, literally, from too much of a good thing. The beautiful girls were chosen from all over the land when they were young. It didn’t matter where they were from, or what their social class. It only mattered that they were fuckable. Those who gave birth to male children became consorts, with the empress, the emperor’s wife, being at the top of the pecking order. She, of course, was chosen from an aristocratic family.
As for the emperor, he never had any privacy, and all his needs were attended to. His life was one of prescribed ritual from dressing, to meetings, to meals, to even the simple desire to go for a walk. From the last emperor Pu Yi’s biography:
In front went an eunuch whose function was roughly that of a motor horn; he walked twenty or thirty yards ahead of the party intoning the sound ‘… chir … chir …’ as a warning to anyone who might be waiting in the vicinity to go away at once. Next came two Chief Eunuchs advancing crabwise on either side of the path; ten paces behind them came the centre of the procession. If I was being carried in a chair there would be two junior eunuchs walking beside me to attend to my wants at any moment; if I was walking they would be supporting me. Next came an eunuch with a large silk canopy followed by a large group of eunuchs, some empty-handed, others holding all sorts of things: a seat in case I wanted to rest, changes of clothing, umbrellas and parasols. After these eunuchs of the Imperial Presence came eunuchs of the Imperial Tea Bureau with boxes of various kinds of cakes and delicacies … They were followed by eunuchs of the Imperial Dispensary … at the end of the procession came the eunuchs who carried commodes and chamberpots. If I was walking, a sedan-chair, open or covered according to the season, would bring up the rear. (Of course! Just in case the emperor decided he didn’t want to walk after all.) This motley procession of several dozen people would proceed in perfect silence and order.
Meals were equally ritualistic, requiring an enormous staff to be ready at a moment’s notice to serve over one hundred dishes to appease the royal stomach.
The inhabitants of the Forbidden City were bound by stultifying ritual and deadening royal behaviour codes. The Chief Eunuchs and the mandarins, the only people with access to the world outside the walls, were the ones with the real power and it was to their great advantage to keep the emperor in paranoid ignorance lest he stand up and roar them into poverty and oblivion. And so it was a prison, extravagant, lavish, and gilded, but a prison none-the-less.
We spent about three hours in the Forbidden City and barely scratched the surface. At times I felt rushed, but in the end was so full that even if I’d had more time I couldn’t take in another thing. I was full with the enormity of it all, and the beauty, and a kind of timeless wonder that such a place exists at all. It reminded me of Topkapi in Turkey, another imperial city within a city, and another example of the mind boggling excesses of kings and their courts.
Next post: Street food and acrobats
All words and images by Alison Louise Armstrong unless otherwise noted
© Alison Louise Armstrong and Adventures in Wonderland – a pilgrimage of the heart, 2010-2019.
Such magnificence, Your compositions really helped to build the excitement as we progress from Mao’s Mausoleum through to the Hall of Supreme Harmony and on to the details! and that Dragon Headed Turtle! The story of the Ewsome Eunuchs was especially fascinating.
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Thanks so much Lisa. I too was fascinated by the eunuchs’ story. So incredible what we humans do – to ourselves, to each other. Endlessly fascinating for me.
The whole complex was amazing, and overwhelming – the sheer size, the crowds. I’d love to go back and explore more at a slower pace, but that’s true of just about every place I’ve been. So much world, so little time. Sigh.
Alison
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I am sitting here in my chair of supreme harmony, Alison, contemplating the challenge of servicing 3000 concubines or having everything cut off. Neither seems particularly desirable, but if I had to choose, I guess I would make a valiant effort at the first option. I certainly wouldn’t want to be ‘as smelly as a Eunuch.’
An enlightening trip to say the least. My favorites, the lions and the turtle dragon! Thanks for another great post. –Curt
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Thank you for a good belly laugh Curt! And for your kind words. Exploring the Forbidden City, both in person and later in research online, was a fascinating and enlightening experience. I am endlessly amazed by the things people do. We are a strange species that’s for sure.
Alison
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I appreciated your efforts, Alison, and learned much more about the Forbidden City. Plus had a few good laughs myself!
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Such fascinating and rich photos and experience Alison.
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Thanks so much Cindy. There was a lot to take on, both in person, and afterwards in researching this post. What a place!
Alison
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Like you my memories of Tiananmen Square are quite different from what you encountered. I love the flower and people filled square. As always your photos and narratives are like traveling oneself. Beautiful.
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Thank you so much Sue. I do try to take people along for the ride.
Tiananmen Square was such a surprise for me!
Alison
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Am I the only one who finds this entire place a bit oppressive? People couldn’t leave, up to 70,000 fellas had to have their jewels chopped off, it was a place of intrigue and murder and supremely complicated rituals…it’s impressingly beautiful, but a prison nonetheless!
However, the photo of the young girl posing in the costume with her Peppa Pig slippers is just BRILLIANT.
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No, you’re not the only one. I found it crowded, and despite the beautiful buildings a bit bereft of feeling. The more I learned about it the more I felt how oppressive it must have been. It sounds like it was a horrible place to live, for just about everyone. I haven’t included all the details. There were mass murders of the concubines by this or that emperor, and some of them buried alive. And everyone basically a slave, even the emperor was a slave to ritual and endless obeisance. So yes, coming across those children all dressed up was a bit of brightness. My fave is the child in red and white.
Alison
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Since I’ve never felt drawn to visit China, my knowledge about the Forbidden City was close to nil. So your post was very educational, Alison, both in word and image, thanks. It prompted me to educate myself a little further, and I came upon an article that describes in great detail the incredible cruelty of those emperors, and the utterly miserable life of the concubines. Lots of atrocities committed, unimaginable suffering endured, if even half of this article was true. I feel a bit like your above reader, finding it difficult to admire the outward beauty of the place while knowing about the oppressive lifestyle that existed within its walls.
That said, I’m looking forward to your following posts about China. It’s a great way to learn about the country without actually having to travel there! 🙂
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There were endless atrocities committed there. I think it was a place of great and ongoing cruelty. Perhaps that’s why I didn’t warm to it while I was there. I blamed the crowds at the time, but perhaps it was the lingering energy as well. Apparently Pu Yi, the last emperor was a very cruel person who had eunuchs whipped, and killed. I’m glad I didn’t know about it before I went there.
Sooo much more to come about China – happier stories too.
Alison
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I really like the architecture and the statues.
Wonderful post.
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Thanks so much rabirius. I really like the architecture too, and the beautiful colourful details. There were some beautiful statues but I couldn’t get a decent shot because of the crowds.
Alison
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Yes. I know the problem. 🙂
Anyway, your photos are still great.
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What an incredible place! I didn’t realize it was so massive. You did an excellent job of explaining it and as always, your pictures tell a good story. I love the little girls dressed up and sitting on the throne. I would be totally overwhelmed with it all.
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Thanks so much Darlene. It really is incredible. And the more research I did the more idealized that in its heyday it was quite sinister – not a happy place for anyone. I too loved the little girls the throne, and yes, I was overwhelmed by it all.
Alison
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Wow what an impressive summary of both history and photographs of this incredible place! I went about ten years ago and as I mentioned it was thick in pollution. Your photos are incredible. They make me want to go back!
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Thanks so much Nicole. It did take a bit of research for this post, but I was glad to do it. It helped me understand it better, even after the fact. The whole thing is a bit overwhelming – both the place itself, which is so huge, and the stories of how it was to live there. I must admit, if I ever go back to Beijing I won’t go back to the Forbidden City even though I probably missed most of it.
Alison
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it feels so much
more beautiful
and less forbidden
than before
reading your
wonderful post 🙂
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Thank you so much David.
It’s an overwhelming place.
Beautiful buildings
now open to all.
Not so beautiful stories
behind it.
Alison
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Your post brings back wonderful memories. When we were there the gardens weren’t in bloom so the square really did look stark. At least there weren’t hordes of tourists. The pollution wasn’t bad and we had a great time in China but I remember leaving the Forbidden City with almost a “cold” feeling. Perhaps the size was a bit overwhelming for me.
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I was there in the Spring, so the gardens in the square were quite full and vibrant, and yes, a complete surprise.
The pollution in Beijing seems to be at least better than it was. I didn’t notice it the way I did in Delhi for instance. The pollution has been replaced by millions of domestic tourists. Many places we went to were very crowded.
I left the Forbidden City feeling overwhelmed – by the crowds, by feeling at the same time a bit rushed and so full I couldn’t take in another thing, and yes, something like a cold feeling. It felt like it had no soul, which is not surprising given its history.
Alison
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When James and I went to the imperial palace in Hue, Vietnam, he said to me about the grand scale of Beijing’s Forbidden City upon which the palace in Vietnam was modeled. Now I understand why he said that; even from your photos I can imagine the sheer size of the entire compound and how big each structure measures. From a modern-day perspective, living in such a grand palace might seem alluring at first. But then as you learn about the many limitations that were imposed within its walls, maybe living with a life according to your own terms despite having less wealth is not too bad at all.
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I couldn’t agree more Bama – I’d much rather have personal freedom than live in a place like that. The scale is huge, and the restrictions apparently were many. A lot of cruelty took place there. It is a compound of many beautiful buildings and very little soul. Maybe one day I’ll get back to Vietnam and see its counterpart in Hue.
Alison
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I got excited reading this post. It’s such a ‘familiar’ place. It must be quite overwhelming to visit. I loved the photo of the little girl sitting on the throne with her cartoon slippers peeping out!
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So glad you liked the post! And yes, it was overwhelming to visit, and even more overwhelming once I started delving into the history of it. It was not a pretty place.
Photographing those children was one of my fave things there. So cute.
Alison
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You either paid much more attention to your guide or did some great research! I could barely keep anything straight about the different areas and functions of the palace, and my favorite activity was taking photos of all the details, like those lavish doors and gates and the brass urns. Somehow I ended up visiting the Forbidden City twice in a two-year span, but even after all that time there, what I remember most are the very small things in that vast complex! Overwhelming place.
As for Tiananmen Square, I was there for the 60th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China in October of 2009, so the square was home to a military parade of about 10,000 troops and a huge display of weapons and colorful flower floats (weird juxtaposition). When I went back in 2011, it seemed almost empty!
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We didn’t have a guide! I do wish we had though I’m a bit ambivalent about guides. I want some information, but often they give so much that it gets to be overwhelming. Too many words. Anyway I wandered through trying to see as much as I could with no clue as to what was what. Then when I came to putting this post together I did a ton of research. There’s soooo much info out there. I tried to distil it down to some stuff that might be interesting without overwhelming people.
I too looked at the details – for me that’s where most of the beauty was – the colourful trim on the buildings, the shape of the roofs, the urns, the doors. I almost even, vaguely, want to go back now I know what I know – I’m sure I’d see it quite differently.
Wow, that parade in Tiananmen Square sounds pretty cool. Would have like to see that. When I was there it was crowded, but far from wall to wall with people. we didn’t spend much time there.
Alison
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Alison, I am in awe of the enormity of this place and your knowledge about the life that went on inside. Did you get all this from your guide? You must have done lots of reading? Totally fascinating, and I was transfixed by your descriptions of the eunuchs and concubines. I love your photo of the blue guard in front of the entrance. Great post!
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Thanks so much Caroline. I’m glad you enjoyed it. As I said to Lexie, we didn’t have a guide! And yes I did a ton of research. It really is a fascinating place. I wish I’d known more about it when I was there, but even after the fact I still find it amazing.
I can’t imagine being one of those guards! I don’t know how long they stand there for before there’s a change of shift, but they are like statues.
Alison
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Impressive, whether you do your research before or after. I’m finding that I’m doing more and more research after I visit a place…blogging sure is a great way of learning (for writer and readers).
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I am wondering about the children who resulted from the emperor’s loins. I didn’t see anything about them–how they were housed, educated, passed along. Or did they have to live outside the domain?ol
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Sorry Judy, but in my research I didn’t come across much info at all about all the children. Only that the mothers of sons were elevated to consort, and that it was not necessarily the oldest son who was chosen as the next emperor.
Alison
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Fantastic post, Alison. I never managed to visit the Forbidden City when I was in China. I had left that till my last day in Beijing only to find out that it was closed on that day…
Lieve
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Thanks so much Lieve. That’s too bad that you didn’t get there. For all it’s brutal history and the insane crowds it’s a really amazing place.
Alison
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Very interesting post ~ Although as you said, some of those details, I would rather not have the visual of. And we all thought that Chinese women who had their feet swaddled had it bad!
We recently stopped in Shengdu China for a 22 hour layover en route to the US from Hong Kong. I have to say that when we arrived at the airport, and I saw Chinese in military uniform it made me feel instantly uncomfortable. Not sure I’ll necessarily get to see more, so it was interesting to read all this information and see the beautiful architecture via your post. Great job!
Peta
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Thanks so much Peta. Sorry about the eunuchs. I found it so fascinating, in a dark kind of way. Eunuchs and concubines both had a pretty hard time of it I suspect. Last night I rewatched The Last Emperor, which apparently played down Pu Yi’s cruelty to the eunuchs. It was a bit of a thrill to see a movie set in a place that I’d so recently seen for myself. I agree – beautiful architecture!
Honestly I was ambivalent about China. Some places/experiences were wonderful, and extraordinary (many more posts to come) and some I found not so much fun.
Alison
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It’s all a bit crazy, isn’t it? You have to wonder what pleasure he can have got out of such pomp and ceremony, but presumably it was all to emphasise his power and frighten off the opposition. At what cost! Both in cash terms and in personal freedom. I don’t think I’ve ever wanted to be an empress 🙂 🙂
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I agree it’s all a bit, or a lot, crazy. A kind of insanity really. Such extravagance, and stultifying ritual. I think it would be an awful way to live. I doubt I’d enjoy being an empress either.
Alison
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Such an informative post about the Forbidden City and your time there. Stunning photos. Tiananmen Square does look crowded – a place steeped in history and of much significance among the locals. It is interesting to read about those who did business with the emperor and they had to band their head on the floor loudly. Hierarchies were certainly emphasised back then.
Amazing that you can dress up in traditional attire and pose alongside the intricate architecture. All part of the first-hand experience of Chinese history. The history surrounding concubines is fascinating, and I remember seeing emperor-concubine relations on the Chinese dramas I saw on TV growing up. Back then an emperor can have a wife and many concubines, or just many concubines all just to get physical. Ladies who could produce sons were the cream of the crop – and (sadly) this is still the case with some parts of Chinese and Asian society these days.
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Thank you so much Mabel for your kind words. I found all the details of how things worked in the Forbidden City really fascinating. Certainly the emperor could have more than one wife, and many concubines, though only the first wife was the Empress.
I have heard that in China it’s preferable to have a boy. When I was there I also heard that parents of daughters can be very very fussy about who their daughter marries since there are so many men to go around. There’s a place in a park (forget which city) where the parents of sons advertise the virtues of their son, hoping they’ll be able to find him a wife. I think they (ie the next generation of Chinese) are starting to rethink the idea that boys are better.
Alison
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In Chinese society boys/men tend to be preferred as they are the ones who carry on the family name and they are seen as more ‘capable’ to to speak – and for women to get together with someone who is has a stable job and able to afford a place. Ideally (and unfortunately) the women shouldn’t have higher education qualifications than their partner. That is an interesting park where parents can advertise the virtues of their son. Sounds like a match-making spot.
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How amazing visual wealth was barely concealed unhappiness and …a form of sanctioned slavery in opulence. For the enuchs and concubines.
Glad you enjoyed at least the architecture.
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I thought the architecture quite lovely, if a bit repetitive. As for the people that lived there it seems it was a form of slavery though some of the eunuchs became quite rich, and the concubines who bore a male child were elevated to the status of consort and probably lived lavish if restricted lives. But from my reading I got the idea that no one could ever leave. It was all pretty horrific. There’s so much more I read but didn’t put in the post.
Alison
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The little that I read and of course movies might over dramatize, but with those “trapped” folks at the mercy the royal household environment, there would be boredom, leading to pettiness, human meanness, jealousy and revenge at times, that would get out of hand. No different than some of the stuff in the English royal court in medieval and Rennaissance times. ie. King Henry VIII.
I did know a face to face friend in Toronto who had 2 grandmothers via 1 grandfather. She and siblings had no interest in the other grandmother. Bigamy and polygamy has been outlawed since Communists took over….but we have some modern day versions with helicopter parent/partner living apart in 2 different countries, etc.
The traditional thinking to have a son….did affect many families. Even my mother…she finally had my brother (child 5). I have 4 other sisters. So my parents “tried”.
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I think your first paragraph sums it up very nicely. I think it applies to just about any royal court. Power, politics, propaganda, and secrets and lies. Everyone just wanting to survive.
My mum had 4 girls and that was enough. She didn’t care that we were all girls. Her sister on the other hand had 4 boys and tried again for a girl and got another boy. She would have been no doubt considered very successful in some cultures including China, but nobody cared in Australia.
Alison
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You captured it beautifully Alison…I also appreciate your narrative accounts…I remember being there I purchased a piece of “fake” art from university students supposedly I learned a lot from my trip there after the fact 🤓 always enjoy your mindful posts 💫 smiles from snowy Alberta 😉
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Thank you so much Hedy. I didn’t come across any university students, with or without art. I too learned a lot after the fact 🙂
Smiles back from sunny Van.
Alison
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I had little to no idea about this, Alison, so really enjoyed your informative tour here. This is all pretty astonishing. The truth is proven stranger than fiction once again, is about all I can say. I’m amazed at the resources consumed, and the scope of empire involved with sustaining an operation like this… It strikes a clear now about how different a time it was, and to think the last emperor to occupy the Forbidden City was just a hundred years ago is confounding as well. I wonder if some of the teenaged children of the growing Chinese middle class see all of this as strange, haunting and almost other worldly as it appears from afar…?
Peace
Michael
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Thanks so much Michael. I’m so glad you enjoyed the tour. I too found it astonishing, and there was much more, just as astonishing, that I didn’t include in the post – it was already long enough. And yes, it was a very different time. Only a hundred years ago that everything changed, and then I was in China 40 years ago and everyone was wearing blue pyjamas, so there has been another enormous change since then.
I’d love to know how the Chinese view the Forbidden City, and what they’re taught about it, if anything. All I know is that we few westerners shared the space with perhaps thousands of domestic tourists so the Chinese are certainly interested in seeing the iconic places of their past.
Alison
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A fascinating article, Alison. Beautifully written and well illustrated. As mesmerising as the palace and the life of its inhabitants was, I felt the ‘forbidding’ atmosphere throughout.
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Thank you so much. I agree – when you delve a little into what it was like to live there it is indeed ‘forbidding’. The more I read the more appalled I was. When I was there I thought it was the crowds that hindered my appreciation of the place, but afterwards as I learned more I think it more likely that it was its history seeping through energetically.
Alison
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Yes, I felt it too.
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Alison, I was drinking up every word and savoring every picture in this post. You did a great job bringing the story of the Forbidden City to life! The last time I was there, in early 2012, I thought that near-zero temperatures would keep the tourist crowds away. How wrong I was! And I must have had only an hour and a half to walk around, without a guide, so in reality I covered very little ground in comparison.
The Forbidden City has been a source of endless fascination for me ever since I was a kid growing up in Hong Kong. I took lessons in Chinese history both in and out of school, and some stories have stuck with me for a very long time.
One teacher explained how royal tradition dictates that at the fall of each dynasty, the victor would burn down the pre-existing palace and build a new one in its place as a sign of a new era. We are incredibly fortunate that the Manchus of the Qing dynasty did not subscribe to that; instead they chose to restore the imperial city of their predecessors.
If you look at the number of rooms based on the Chinese measurement (jian), the count increases from more than 8,700 to 9,999 and a half. Nine was the imperial number, so 9,999 was very auspicious. And because heaven was believed to have 10,000 rooms, the designers/emperor didn’t feel it was prudent to outdo heaven and incur the wrath of the gods.
I also learned about Consort Zhen, the poor Qing-dynasty concubine (said to be one of the Emperor’s favorites) who was thrown down a tiny palace well to drown under mysterious circumstances when a coalition of eight foreign countries (Britain, Russia, France, the US, Germany, Japan, Italy, and Austria-Hungary) invaded and occupied Beijing in 1900 to put down the anti-Western Boxer Rebellion. A contemporary journalist told of the mass looting instigated by these armies, and I recall one history teacher explaining that the scratches on those enormous gilded water urns in the Forbidden City were the work of soldiers trying to rub the gold off the bronze vessels.
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Thank you so much James. I so appreciate your kind words. I feel as if I’ve learned a lot about writing from reading your posts.
I can imagine the stories of the Forbidden City would stick with you, especially having a background in Chinese history. My own background of course was in British and Australian history. China was a huge mystery.
So fortunate indeed that the Manchus decided to restore rather than rebuild and we have this amazing place to visit today – living history.
I had read a bit about there being 9999 rooms though didn’t understand the
significance of it, and then read several other sources that put the number at a bit over 8700.
I think the story of Consort Zhen (so sad :(), and the looting are some of many many stories held by the walls of the Forbidden City. Five hundred years of occupancy! It is quite extraordinary and I feel as if I barely scratched the surface both when there in China and in my research for this post. It was all fascinating!
Alison
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Size, decorations, numbers.. everything is so impressive. Thanks for sharing. By the way, the lions do remind me of gargoyles in some western cultures. Cheers!
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You’re welcome! I found size matters in China – from the Forbidden City to the enormous mausoleum that includes the Terracotta Warriors, to the new cities of 10 or more million that spring up seemingly overnight, to the rail network, to the new solar plants they are constructing. Everything it seems is on a vast scale. As you can see the Forbidden City is huge! And very impressive. I wish I’d had more time there.
The lions also reminded me of the lions guarding the buildings at Angkor Wat in Cambodia.
Thanks for commenting. Cheers,
Alison
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This post is magnificent!!! So many fascinating stories about this mysterious and complex place. I’ve wondered before about eunuchs and concubines and their roles at the court so thanks for illuminating even the less savory details of that. And good job at giving less fucks in regards to censoring yourself! “Fuckable” was the perfect word choice for that situation.
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Thanks so much Mo! I really had fun putting it together though it took quite a lot of research. Posts like this always start out kind of a research slog, and then I find my rhythm and a sense of what I think is important for me to include. There is a huge amount of info inline as I’m sure you can imagine. Re giving less fucks – I learned from an expert! 🙂
Alison
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