Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Beijing Biz Trip May 2011 Day 2 P3

The journey inside Forbidden City continues ....

Copper & Iron vasts were part of the fighting equipments in the palace. The Forbidden City has a total of 368 copper and iron vasts of various sizes.

Palace of Heavenly Purity, which is the major structure of the Inner Court. The "Heir Apparent Box" - a system secretly set up by Emperor Yongzheng, was placed behind the board inscribed with the words "Zheng Da Guang Ming". The name of the emperor's successor, written by the emperor himself, was kept in this box. After the emperor passed away, the secretly appointed crown price would ascend the throne.

The Hall of Union & Peace, aka Jiao Tai Dian. The inscriptions were written by Emperor Kangxi. which means doing nothing. The words "Jiao Tai" comes from the book of changes and meant the union of heaven and earth. Hence, Jiao Tai Dian is situated between Qian Qing Gong (Palace of Heavenly Purity) and Kun Ning Gong (Hall of Earthly Tranquility)

*pardon the dirty window!* Hall of Earthly Tranquility. Emperor Shunzhi, Kangxi, Tongzh, Guangxu and Puyi lived in this hall after they are married before moving to other halls. In the room sits a dragon-phoenix wedding bed. The silk quity is embroidered with hundreds of playing children, hoping that the emperor and empress will have many descendants.

Crossing this gate, we would have reached the Imperial Garden, where pavilions and halls are distributed orderly, landscaped with pine trees, cypresses, bamboos as well as hills and rocks.

Ancient cypresses not only decorate the garden, but they also have implied meanings - Baizhi (cypress branches) has a similar pronounciation as Baizi (hundreds of children), implying emperor's wish for multiple descendants.

Hill of Accumulated Elegance, Dui Xiu Shan. The hill is about 10m high and was created by piling rocks on a previous hall. Atop the hill is the Pavillion of Imperial Scenery.

Hall of Mental Cultivation, which was where the Qing emperor lived, handled the state affairs and had discussions with officials.
As one of the 6 Western Places, the Palace of Gathering Excellence was where Empress Cixi once lived.


Yan He Gate, leading towards Gate of Martial Spirit.

As the north gate of Forbidden City, the Gate of Marital Spirit was particularly for imperial concubines and members to come in and go out of the palace. With this, I had completed my tour of the palace - there are still some attractions that I didn't have the time, as the place is just simply too big to finish within 2 hours.

Back in the clubhouse, munching on club sandwich and working off the laptop.

Dinner @ Da Dong (北京大董烤鸭店), 5-min walk from the clubhouse. We tried to make a reservation for 8pm, but was told they were fully booked. However, they do take in walk-in and off we went~

While Quan Ju De's decor mirrored the traditional Chinese architecture, Da Dong leaned towards modern minimalist concept.

The giant open kitchen, specially catered for roasting peking duck, which greeted you upon stepping into the restaurant.

Awards decorating just one side of the wall ... more on the other side!

Headed to the watering hole for drinks while waiting for our table. Good strategy - to drink (another revenue source) while to wait!

Started my night with some applish-drink, cant rem exactly what I drank.

Tables get filled up quickly as soon as it gets cleared.

After approx 45 mins (or more) wait, we had a table! Yippee. The window decor, shot from inside of the restaurant.

Food & drinks menu.

Napkin box

All set and ready to start! Can't wait :)

The set that each customer is supposed to order, to complement the process of eating peking duck. It contained sweet sauce, shallots, sugar, garlic paste, preserved vegetables, pickles, radish, cucumber and pancake.

Here comes the chef! The skin and the meat were literally falling apart under his nitty moves.

Yum yum! Personally, this is way better than what I had earlier - it wasn't as oily and the meat was leaner. Coat the skin with sugar before popping it into your mouth - my latest method of savoring this dish :)

Owen started his night with 6 mini balls of spinach.

Not a fan of vegetables, but this dish really wowed me over. 2 love birds accompanied with egg white. And I finished it myself *proud*

A bowl of hot dumpling soup, heavenly when the restaurant is quite cold.

More greens for Owen~ He can't do without his greens, so guess I'm not his fave vege partner, since I can't help him to finish, lol.

We proceeded on to seafood - fish for Owen while I had my prawn & scallops. Da Dong's menu allows you to order different serving sizes, which is good as that means we can order more dishes to try out :)

Chicken with vegetables, followed by sea cucumber.

The table full of food :)

Sorbet & large platter of fruits to end the meal~ I've already planned my next trip back for another scrumptious meal upon walking out of the place, heehee!

Monday, September 12, 2011

Beijing Biz Trip May 2011 Day 2 P2


As I walked through the gates, more people greeted me in the face! Guess I have no choice but to squeeze with these people :( Visit to the Forbidden City, now renamed as Palace Museum. With many halls and pavilions, marble railings and steps, the Forbidden City is magnificent.

The Wumen Gate (Meridian Gate), the formal entrance to the Forbidden City, was popularly known as Five Phoenix Turrets. It is the largest of the 4 gates of Forbidden City. Measuring almost 38m in height, it is the tallest building in the Forbidden City.

Got my ticket & the guidebook, time to venture in!

Emperor and his family greeting you as you entered the palace.


Behind the Meridian Gate, one can see 5 bridges with a courtyard named the Inner Golden Water River Bridges. The central bridge was used exclusively by the emperor. The two flanking it were for use by members of the royal family & the two outer bridges were for court officials. The Inner Golden Water River Bridges were supposed to represent the 5 virtues preached by Confucius: Benevolence, Righteousness, Rites, Intelligence and Fidelity. They were shaped like 5 arrows reporting symbolically to Heaven, because the emperor considered himself the Son of Heaven.

Tai He Men (Gate of Supreme Harmony) is the front gate of the outer court. This is the highest ranking gate in the Forbidden City, where the emperor handled state affairs, listened to ministers' reports and issued imperial edicts.

In front of the gate is a pair of bronze lions, the largest pair in Forbidden City. The one on the left (pic above) stepping on a ball is the male, while the one on the right (forgot to take pics!) touching an infant lion with its claw is the female. The male lion symbolize dominant rule over the country and the female represents multiple descendants.

A three-tiered white marble terrace rises from this square.

The Hall of Supreme Harmony, as the first and main hall of the three major halls, is the most magnificent in the Forbidden City was where grand ceremonies, like emperor's enthronement, imperial wedding and title conferring took place.

The Hall of Supreme Harmony rises some 30 meters above the level of the surrounding square. It is the ceremonial center of imperial power, and the largest surviving wooden structure in China. It is nine bays wide and five bays deep, the numbers nine and five being symbolically connected to the majesty of the Emperor.The six pillars nearest the imperial throne are covered with gold, and the entire area is decorated with a dragon motif. The imperial dragon throne, in particular, has five dragons coiled around the back and handrests. The screen behind it features sets of nine dragons, again reflecting the "nine-five" symbolism.

The sloping ridges of the building roofs are decorated with a line of statuettes, led by a man riding on a phoenix and followed by an imperial dragon. The number of statuettes represents the status of the building. The Hall of Supreme Harmony has 10, the only building in the country to be permitted this in Imperial times.

This is the largest stone carving in the palace, 16.75m long, 3.07 m wide and 1.7m thick, weighs more than 200 tons, hence the name large stone cravings. This was made of a single piece of large blue stone. With beautiful interlocking lotus patterns all around, the huge stone portrayed 9 dragons amidst the clouds, as the dragon is an imperial figure.

The bronze crane, was a symbol of luck and longevity.

The Hall of Central Harmony (foreground) and Hall of Preserving Harmony. Hall of Central Harmony is square in shape and served as a resting hall for the emperor to prepare and rest before attending grand ceremonies held in the Hall of Supreme Harmony.

A throne is placed in the centre of the hall and a board hangs above, with an inscription written by Emperor Qianlong. The inscription reads "Yun Zhi Jue Zhong" which means the way to Heaven is profound and mysterious and the way of mankind is difficult. Only if we make a precise and unified plan and follow the doctrine of the mean, can we rule the country well.

Hall of Preserved Harmony, where the emperor changed clothes in this hall before an important ceremony. In the Qing dynasty, the emperor held banquets here for his prices, dukes and ministers of ethnic minorites on the lunar New Year's Eve and the Lantern Festival. The words "Bao He" are from the book of Changes, meaning "maintaining harmony between all things on earth to have a long period of peace and stability".

Finally, a spot of lesser people for me to take pictures with just the buildings at the back!

Heading off to bed now, will continue the tour of forbidden city in the next post :)
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