Beihai Park

Coordinates: 39°55′28″N 116°22′59″E / 39.92444°N 116.38306°E / 39.92444; 116.38306
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39°55′28″N 116°22′59″E / 39.92444°N 116.38306°E / 39.92444; 116.38306

Beihai Park
北海公园
The White Dagoba (a stupa) on Jade Flower Island
Beihai Park is located in Beijing
Beihai Park
Beihai Park
Beihai Park is located in China
Beihai Park
Beihai Park
TypeUrban park
LocationBeijing, China
Area71 hectares (180 acres)[citation needed]
Created1179 (first park)
1925 (modern park)
Owned byBeijing Municipal Administration Center of Parks
StatusOpen all year
Beihai Park
Satellite image of Beihai Park (1967)
Traditional Chinese北海公園
Simplified Chinese北海公园
Literal meaning"Public Park of the Northern Sea"

Beihai Park is a public park and former imperial garden immediately northwest of the Forbidden City in Beijing, China.

First built in the 12th century, Beihai is among the largest of all surviving Chinese gardens and contains numerous historically important structures, palaces, and temples. Once part of the Imperial City, it has been open to the public since 1925. As with many of Chinese imperial gardens, Beihai was designed to imitate renowned scenic spots and architecture from various regions of China, particularly Jiangnan around the Yangtze Delta. Various aspects of the park evoke the elaborate pavilions and canals of Hangzhou and Yangzhou, the delicate gardens of Suzhou, and the natural scenery around Lake Tai with its famously porous stones. Beihai Park itself is now reckoned one of the masterpieces of Chinese gardening and landscaping.[1]

The present park has an area of around 71 hectares (180 acres) with a lake that covers more than half of its area. At its center is Jade Flower Island (t , s , Qiónghuádǎo), whose highest point is 32 meters (105 ft). The park's lake is connected at its northern end to the Shichahai.

Name[edit]

"Beihai" is the pinyin romanization of the Mandarin pronunciation of the garden's Chinese name, 北海, meaning "Northern Sea". The name corresponds to the "Central Sea" (, Zhōnghǎi) and "Southern Sea" (, Nánhǎi) immediately to the park's south, still used—under the combined name Zhongnanhai—as the restricted headquarters of China's paramount leaders.

History[edit]

In 1179, Emperor Zhangzong of the Jurchen Jin dynasty had a country resort built northeast of Zhongdu, his empire's central capital located in what is now southwestern Beijing. Taiye Lake was excavated along the Jinshui River[2] and the Palace of Great Peace (t , s , Dàníng Gōng) was erected on Jade Flower Island in the lake.[3]

During the reign of Kublai Khan of the Mongol Yuan dynasty, the island was redesigned by various architects and officials including Liu Bingzhong, Guo Shoujing, and Amir al-Din.[4][5] Taiye Lake was enclosed within the walls of the Imperial City of the Yuan Empire's new capital Khanbaliq.

The Ming dynasty was initially based at Nanjing but moved to Beijing under the Yongle Emperor, with construction of his palace complex beginning in 1406. At this time, Taiye Lake was divided by bridges into three lakes described as the "Northern", "Central", and "Southern Seas". These lakes formed part of an extensive royal estate within the Imperial City called the Western Garden (西苑, Xīyuàn).

In 1747, the Qianlong Emperor ordered that three rare calligraphy works made by Wang Xizhi, Wang Xianzhi, and Wang Xun then housed within the Hall of Mental Cultivation along with 134 other calligraphic works from the Imperial Collection were to be carved into stone and displayed at the Pavilion of Reviewing the Past beside Beihai.[6][7][8]

Notable places[edit]

Beihai Park includes several Buddhist temples within its grounds, including the Temple of Everlasting Peace (, Yǒng'ān Sì) and the Chanfu Temple.

The White Dagoba or Pagoda (, Báitǎ) is a Tibetan-style stupa placed on the highest point on Jade Flower Island, built to honor the visit of the 5th Dalai Lama in 1651. It is 40 meters (131 ft) high[9] and made of white stone. It houses reliquaries with Buddhist scriptures, monks' robes and alms bowls, and relics, the ash and bones of monks left after their cremation. Sun, moon, and flame engravings decorate the surface of the tower. Destroyed by the 1679 Sanhe-Pinggu earthquake, it was rebuilt the following year. Damage from the 1976 Tangshan earthquake was repaired the same year.

On the lake's north bank lies the Five Dragon Pavilions, five connected pavilions with spires and pointed upswept eaves, built under the Ming.[10]

The Nine-Dragon Wall lies north of the Five Dragon Pavilions. It was built in 1402 and is one of three walls of its kind in China. It is made of glazed bricks in seven colors. Nine complete dragons playing in the clouds decorate both sides of the wall.

Many smaller gardens exist throughout the park. The Jingxin or Quieting Heart Room is a garden on the north bank that covers more than 4,000 square meters (43,056 sq ft).

The Hall of Received Light (Chengguangdian) is the main structure in the Round City (t , s , Tuánchéng). It is a spacious building with a double-eaved roof made of yellow glazed tiles bordered in green. Inside there is a Buddha that is 1.6 meters (5 ft 3 in) tall, which was presented to the Guangxu Emperor of the Qing by a Khmer king. It is carved from a single piece of pure white jade inlaid with precious stones. The Eight-Nation Alliance damaged the statue's left arm during the 1900 Battle of Beijing.

The Taihu rocks in Beihai Park were shipped from Henan Province. There are also various pieces of art ranging from Yuan jade jars to a collection of 495 centuries-old stelas.[1]

Legacy[edit]

The Five-Pavilion Bridge and Lotus Tower in Yangzhou's Slender West Lake Scenic Area were self-consciously modeled on Beihai Park's Five Dragon Pavilions and White Dagoba to curry favor with the Kangxi and Qianlong Emperors during their southern tours of Jiangnan in the 18th century.[11]

Gallery[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

Citations[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Beihai Park". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. 2008-09-03. Archived from the original on 2007-07-02.
  2. ^ Du, Pengfei & al. "History of Water Supply in Pre-Modern China" from Evolution of Water Supply through the Millennia, pp. 169 ff. Accessed 16 November 2013.
  3. ^ Rinaldi, Bianca. The Chinese Garden: Garden Types for Contemporary Landscape Architecture, p. 137. Walter de Gruyter, 2011. Accessed 16 November 2013.
  4. ^ Steinhardt, Nancy Riva Shatzman (1981). Imperial Architecture under Mongolian Patronage: Khubilai's Imperial City of Daidu. Harvard University. p. 222.
  5. ^ "Yeheidie'erding" (Amir al-Din) in Bai Shouyi, Zhongguo Huihui minzu shi. Yang Huaizhong. pp. 813–818.
  6. ^ Lauer, Uta (2020-11-23). "Venerable Copies: The Afterlife of a Fragment of a Letter by Wang Xizhi (303–361)". Fakes and Forgeries of Written Artefacts from Ancient Mesopotamia to Modern China. De Gruyter. pp. 77–88. doi:10.1515/9783110714333-004. ISBN 978-3-11-071433-3.
  7. ^ "Letter to Boyuan in Running Script|The Palace Museum". en.dpm.org.cn. Retrieved 2021-05-20.
  8. ^ "Top 10 calligraphy masterpieces of ancient China - China.org.cn". www.china.org.cn. Retrieved 2021-05-16.
  9. ^ "White Pagoda of Beihai Park". www.beijingservice.com. Retrieved 2023-06-11.
  10. ^ "Beijing White Pagoda Temple". www.china-tour.cn/.
  11. ^ Olivová (2009), p. 9.

Bibliography[edit]

External links[edit]