Difference between revisions of "Imperial Tombs of the Ming and Qing Dynasties" - New World Encyclopedia

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The sites of the Ming Dynasty Imperial Tombs had been selected using [[Feng Shui]] ([[geomancy]]) as a way of prohibiting evil spirits and destructive winds from the North. An arc-shaped area at the foot of the [[Jundu Mountains]] north of Beijing served that purpose well. The forty square kilometer area, enclosed by the mountains in a pristine, quiet valley full of dark earth, tranquil water met the requirements of Feng Shui, becoming the [[necropolis]] of the Ming Dynasty.<ref>Susan Levitt. 2000. ''Taoist feng shui'' (Rochester, Vt: Destiny Books), p. 3</ref>
 
The sites of the Ming Dynasty Imperial Tombs had been selected using [[Feng Shui]] ([[geomancy]]) as a way of prohibiting evil spirits and destructive winds from the North. An arc-shaped area at the foot of the [[Jundu Mountains]] north of Beijing served that purpose well. The forty square kilometer area, enclosed by the mountains in a pristine, quiet valley full of dark earth, tranquil water met the requirements of Feng Shui, becoming the [[necropolis]] of the Ming Dynasty.<ref>Susan Levitt. 2000. ''Taoist feng shui'' (Rochester, Vt: Destiny Books), p. 3</ref>
  
A wall surrounds the entire tomb site, a seven kilometer road named the "Spirit Way" leads into the complex. It is one of the finest preserved pieces of fifteenth century [[Chinese art]] and [[Chinese architecture|architecture]]. A large, three-arched gateway, painted red, and called the "Great Red Gate", serves as the main gateway.
+
"Spirit Way", a seven kilometer road enters the complex through a wall that surrounds the tomb complex. The "Great Red Gate", a large, three-arched gateway, painted red, and called , serves as the main gateway. As of 2008, the public has access to three tombs: '''Chang Ling''', the largest ({{coord|40|18|5.16|N|116|14|35.45|E|type:landmark}}); '''Ding Ling''', whose underground palace has been excavated ({{coord|40|17|42.43|N|116|12|58.53|E|type:landmark}}); and '''Zhao Ling'''. There have been no excavations since 1989, but plans for new archeological research and further opening of tombs have been made public.
  
At present, three tombs are open to the public: '''Chang Ling''', the largest ({{coord|40|18|5.16|N|116|14|35.45|E|type:landmark}}); '''Ding Ling''', whose underground palace has been excavated ({{coord|40|17|42.43|N|116|12|58.53|E|type:landmark}}); and '''Zhao Ling'''. There have been no excavations since 1989, but plans for new archeological research and further opening of tombs have circulated.
+
[[UNESCO]] designated [[Imperial Tombs of the Ming and Qing Dynasties]] a  [[World Heritage Site]] in August 2003.
 
 
The Ming Tombs were listed as a [[UNESCO]] [[World Heritage Site]] in August 2003. They were listed along with other tombs under the "[[Imperial Tombs of the Ming and Qing Dynasties]]" designation.
 
  
 
====Excavation of Ding Ling tomb====
 
====Excavation of Ding Ling tomb====

Revision as of 12:30, 13 November 2008

Imperial Tombs of the Ming and Qing Dynasties*
UNESCO World Heritage Site

An overview of the Changling tomb
State Party Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg China
Type Cultural
Criteria i, ii, iii, iv, vi
Reference 1004
Region** Asia-Pacific
Inscription history
Inscription 2000  (24th Session)
Extensions 2003; 2004
* Name as inscribed on World Heritage List.
** Region as classified by UNESCO.

Imperial Tombs of the Ming and Qing Dynasties are tombs that date from the Ming and Qing dynasties of China.

UNESCO designated the collection of tombs and burial complexes a World Heritage Sites in 2000, making additions in 2003 and 2004.

Ming Dynasty Tombs

Standing in the Spirit Way at the Ming Tombs looking back towards the entry gate.
Serial ID No. Tomb Province Location Coordinates (dms.s) Area (m²) Buffer (m²) Year inscribed
1004-004 Ming Tombs Beijing Municipality Changping District N40 16 10 E116 14 40 8,230,000 81,000,000 2003

The Ming Dynasty Tombs (Chinese: 明朝十三陵; pinyin: Míng cháo shí sān líng; lit. Thirteen Tombs of the Ming Dynasty) are located some fifty kilometers due north of Beijing.[1] The third Ming Dynasty emperor Yongle (1402-1424), who moved the capital of China from Nanjing to the present location of northwest Beijing, selected the site. The Ming tombs of the thirteen emperors of the Ming Dynasty sit on the southern slope of Mount Taishou (originally Mount Huangtu). emperor Yongle planned the layout of the ancient city of Beijing. After the construction of the Imperial Palace (the Forbidden City) in 1420, the Yongle Emperor selected his burial site and creating his own mausoleum.

Thirteen Ming Dynasty Emperors were buried in the Imperial Tomb area. The tombs of the first two Ming Emperors are located near Nanjing (the capital city during their reigns). Emperor Jingtai, denied an imperial burial by Emperor Tianshun, was instead buried west of Beijing. The last Chongzhen Emperor, Si Ling, had hanged himself in April 1644, was the last buried here; his tomb was on a much smaller scale than his predecessors. In 1644 Li Zicheng's army pillaged many of the tombs before advancing and capturing Beijing in April of that year.

Layout

An overview of the Changling tomb
Statue in the Ming Tombs grounds

The sites of the Ming Dynasty Imperial Tombs had been selected using Feng Shui (geomancy) as a way of prohibiting evil spirits and destructive winds from the North. An arc-shaped area at the foot of the Jundu Mountains north of Beijing served that purpose well. The forty square kilometer area, enclosed by the mountains in a pristine, quiet valley full of dark earth, tranquil water met the requirements of Feng Shui, becoming the necropolis of the Ming Dynasty.[2]

"Spirit Way", a seven kilometer road enters the complex through a wall that surrounds the tomb complex. The "Great Red Gate", a large, three-arched gateway, painted red, and called , serves as the main gateway. As of 2008, the public has access to three tombs: Chang Ling, the largest (40°18′5.16″N 116°14′35.45″E / 40.3014333, 116.2431806); Ding Ling, whose underground palace has been excavated (40°17′42.43″N 116°12′58.53″E / 40.2951194, 116.2162583); and Zhao Ling. There have been no excavations since 1989, but plans for new archeological research and further opening of tombs have been made public.

UNESCO designated Imperial Tombs of the Ming and Qing Dynasties a World Heritage Site in August 2003.

Excavation of Ding Ling tomb

Ding Ling (Chinese: 定陵; pinyin: Dìng Lìng; literally "Tomb of Stability"), the tomb of the Wanli Emperor is the only one of the Ming Tombs to have been excavated.[3] It also remains the only imperial tomb to have been excavated since the founding of the People's Republic of China. The excavation of Ding Ling began in 1956 after a group of prominent scholars led by Guo Moruo and Wu Han began advocating the excavation of Chang Ling, the tomb of the Yongle Emperor, the largest and oldest of the Ming Dynasty Tombs. Despite winning approval from premier Zhou Enlai, archaeologists vetoed the plan because of the importance and public profile of Chang Ling. Instead, they selected Ding Ling, the third largest of the Ming Tombs, as a trial site in preparation for the excavation of Chang Ling. The excavation completed in 1957, the government established a museum in 1959.

The excavation revealed an intact tomb, with thousands of items of silk, textiles, wood, and porcelain, and the bodies of the Wanli Emperor and his two empresses. Neither the technology nor the resources to adequately preserve the excavated artifacts existed at that time. After several disastrous preservation attempts, the excavators simply piled the silk and other textiles recovered from the tomb into a storage room which leaked water and wind. As a result, most of the surviving artifacts have severely deteriorated, replicas taking their place on display in the museum. Furthermore, the political impetus behind the excavation created pressure to quickly complete the excavation. The haste meant that documentation of the excavation was poor.

An even more severe problem soon befell the project when a series of political mass movements swept the country. That escalated into the Cultural Revolution in 1966. For the next ten years, all archaeological work stopped. Wu Han, one of the key advocates of the project, became one of the first major targets of the Cultural Revolution He was denounced, dying in jail in 1969. Fervent Red Guards stormed the Ding Ling museum, dragging the remains of the Wanli Emperor and empresses to the front of the tomb, where they were posthumously "denounced" and burned. Many other artifacts were also destroyed. In 1979, after the death of Mao Zedong and the end of the Cultural Revolution, archaeological work resumed. Archaeologists who had survived the turmoil prepared an excavation report.

The lessons learned from the Ding Ling excavation led to a new policy of the People's Republic of China government to excavate historical sites only for preservation. All proposals to open imperial tombs have been denied since Ding Ling, even when the tomb entrance had been accidentally opened, as was the case of the Qianling Mausoleum. The government abandoned the plan to use Ding Ling as a trial site for the excavation of Chang Ling.

Ming Dynasty Tombs

Western Qing Tombs

Serial ID No. Tomb Province Location Coordinates (dms.s) Area (m²) Buffer (m²) Year inscribed
1004-003 Western Qing Tombs Hebei Province Yixian County Baoding City N39 20 E115 13 18,420,000 47,580,000 2000

The Western Qing Tombs (Chinese: 清西陵; pinyin: Qing Xi líng; lit. Western Tombs of the Qing Dynasty) are located some 140 kilometers (87 miles) southwest of Beijing in Hebei province near the town of Yixian. The Western Qing Tombs constitutes a necropolis that incorporates four royal mausoleums where seventy-eight royal members have been buried. Those include four emperors of the Qing Dynasty and their empresses, imperial concubines, princes and princesses, as well as other royal servants.[4]

History

Emperor Yongzheng initiated construction of the Western Qing tombs, braking with tradition and refused to be buried in the Eastern Qing Tombs. Yongzheng may have illegally usurped the throne by eliminating his brothers and his motives. By relocating his tomb to the Western Qing tombs, he may have shown his intention not to be buried alongside his father the Kangxi Emperor. Later his son, the Qianlong Emperor, decided that he should be buried in the Eastern Qing tombs and have dictated that thereafter burials should alternate between the eastern and western sites, although this was not followed consistently.

The first tomb, the Tai Ling, was completed in 1737, two years after the Yongzheng reign. The last imperial interment was in 1998, when the ashes of Aisin Gioro Puyi, the last emperor, were moved to a commercial cemetery here.

Main Tombs

The four tombs in Western Qing Tombs are:

  • Tailing for Emperor Yongzheng(1678-1735, the 3rd emperor)
  • Changling for Emperor Jiaqing (1760-1820, the 5th emperor)
  • Muling for Emperor Daoguang (1782-1850, the 6th emperor)
  • Chongling for Emperor Guangxu (1871-1908, the 9th emperor)

Although the Western Qing tombs offers much attraction it is not as well known as the Ming Dynasty Tombs. The Chang Ling (tomb of the Jiaqing emperor) and Chong Ling (tomb of the Guangxu emperor) are opened to the public.

Xiaoling Tomb

Statue inside the Ming Xiaoling Mausoleum
Statue of a Stone Lion inside the Mausoleum
Serial ID No. Tomb Province Location Coordinates (dms.s) Area (m²) Buffer (m²) Year inscribed
1004-001 Xianling Tomb Hubei Province Zhongxiang N31 01 E112 39 876,000 2,264,000 2000

The Ming Xiaoling Mausoleum is the tomb of the Hongwu Emperor of the Ming Dynasty. It lies at the northern foot of Purple Mountain (Chinese: 紫金山; pinyin: Zĭjīn Shān; literally "Purple-Golden Mountain") in Nanjing, China. Legend says that to prevent robbery of the tomb, thirteen identical processions of funeral troops started from thirteen city gates to obscure the real burying site. The construction of the mausoleum began during the Ming Dynasty in 1381 C.E. and ended in 1405, with an enormous cost and 100,000 laborers. The original wall of the mausoleum measured more than 22.5 kilometers long. The mausoleum was built under heavy guard of 5,000 military troops.

The sacred way started from Sifangcheng (Rectangular city), a pavilion where a splendid carved stone stele in the memory of the Hongwu Emperor Zhu Yuanzhang stands, with a hymn inscribed by his fourth son. The top of the pavilion has been destroyed. In the middle of the 1800-meter-long winding sacred way, six kinds and twelve pairs of animals guard the tomb. Beyond them stands a pair of decorative columns called huabiao in Chinese. Four pairs of ministers and generals have been standing there for centuries to accompany His Majesty beneath.

The local government in the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) inscribed on a stone tablet outside of the gate of the mausoleum, an order to protect the tomb. Inside the gate, a pavilion hosts five steles. The Emperor Kangxi on his third inspection tour had the central stele inscribed with four Chinese characters. Behind the pavilion, other annexes had stood. Most of them collapsed, yielding relics that reveal original splendor of the dynasty. The emperor and his queen were buried in a clay vault, 400 meters in diameter. On a stone wall surrounding the vault, seven Chinese characters were inscribed, identifying the mausoleum of Emperor Ming Taizu (respected title of Emperor Zhu Yuanzhang). The mountain to the south of the tomb is the mausoleum of Sun Quan, King of the Kingdom of Wu in the Three Kingdoms period (220-265). The placement of that tomb forced the Sacred Way to bend.

In 2003, along with the Ming Dynasty Tombs north of Beijing, the Ming Xiaoling Mausoleum of Nanjing was inscribed by UNESCO as part of the World Heritage Sites "Imperial Tombs of the Ming and Qing Dynasties."


Zhaoling

The Red Gate of Zhaoling Tomb of the Qing Dynasty, Shenyang, China
Serial ID No. Tomb Province Location Coordinates (dms.s) Area (m²) Buffer (m²) Year inscribed
1004-014 Zhaoling Tomb of the Qing Dynasty Liaoning Province Shenyang City   478,900 3,187,400 2004

Zhaoling ("Luminous Tomb" or the "Northern Mausoleum") is the tomb of the second Qing emperor, Huang Taji, and his consorts.[5] The tomb, located within Beiling Park, in the northern suburbs of Shenyang, draws a large number of sightseers. The tomb complex took eight years to build (between 1643 and 1651) and has a row of animal statues leading to it.

Other Tombs

Serial ID No. Tomb Province Location Coordinates (dms.s) Area (m²) Buffer (m²) Year inscribed
1004-006 Tomb of Chang Yuchun Jiangsu Province Nanjing City N32 03 44 E118 49 54 9,800   2003
1004-001 Xianling Tomb Hubei Province Zhongxiang N31 01 E112 39 876,000 2,264,000 2000
1004-002 Eastern Qing Tombs Hebei Province Zunhua N41 11 E117 38 2,240,000 78,000,000 2000
1004-005 Xiaoling Tomb Jiangsu Province Nanjing City N32 03 30 E118 51 07 1,160,000 1,800,000 2003
1004-007 Tomb of Qiu Cheng Jiangsu Province Nanjing City N32 03 51 E118 49 59 5,500   2003
1004-008 Tomb of Wu Liang Jiangsu Province Nanjing City N32 04 00 E118 49 51 4,000 1,800,000 2003
1004-009 Tomb of Wu Zhen Jiangsu Province Nanjing City N32 04 05 E118 49 57 3,500   2003
1004-010 Tomb of Xu Da Jiangsu Province Nanjing City N32 04 30 E118 50 06 8,500   2003
1004-011 Tomb of Li Wenzhong Jiangsu Province Nanjing City N32 04 47 E118 50 23 8,700   2003
1004-012 Yongling Tomb of the Qing Dynasty Liaoning Province Fushun City   2,365,900 13,439,400 2004
1004-013 Fuling Tomb of the Qing Dynasty Liaoning Province Shenyang City   538,600 7,023,600 2004

2004 additions

The three Imperial Tombs of the Qing Dynasty in Liaoning Province include the Yongling Tomb, the Fuling Tomb, and the Zhaoling Tomb, all built in the seventeenth century. Constructed for the founding emperors of the Qing Dynasty and their ancestors, the tombs follow the precepts of traditional Chinese geomancy and fengshui theory. They feature rich decoration of stone statues and carvings and tiles with dragon motifs, illustrating the development of the funerary architecture of the Qing Dynasty. The three tomb complexes, and their numerous edifices, combine traditions inherited from previous dynasties and new features of Manchu civilization.[6]

See Also

Notes

  1. Fredric M. Kaplan, Julian M. Sobin, and Arne J. De Keijzer. 1986. The China guidebook (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co.), p. 273
  2. Susan Levitt. 2000. Taoist feng shui (Rochester, Vt: Destiny Books), p. 3
  3. M. A. Aldrich. 2006. The search for a vanishing Beijing: a guide to China's capital through the ages (Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press), p. 318
  4. Nancy Shatzman Steinhardt. 2002. Chinese architecture. The culture and civilization of China (New Haven: Yale University Press), p. 157.
  5. Alan Samagalski, Robert Strauss, and Michael Buckley. 1988. China, a travel survival kit (South Yarra, Vic: Lonely Planet), p. 279.
  6. Original Decision Document. Retrieved October 5, 2008.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Aldrich, M. A. 2006. The search for a vanishing Beijing: a guide to China's capital through the ages. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press. ISBN 9789622097773.
  • Kaplan, Fredric M., Arne J. De Keijzer, and Julian M. Sobin. 1985. The China guidebook. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co. ISBN 9780395377628.
  • Levitt, Susan. 2000. Taoist feng shui. Rochester, Vt: Destiny Books. ISBN 9780892817238.
  • Steinhardt, Nancy Shatzman. 2002. Chinese architecture. The culture and civilization of China. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300095593.
  • Samagalski, Alan, Robert Strauss, and Michael Buckley. 1988. China, a travel survival kit. South Yarra, Vic: Lonely Planet. ISBN 9780864420039.

External links

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