Hall of the Supreme Principle
Hall of the Supreme Principle (pinyin: Tàijí Diàn) is one of the Six Western Palaces which used to be residences of imperial concubines.[1] The palace is western to the Palace of Eternal Longevity, northern to the Palace of Eternal Spring, southern to the Hall of Mental Cultivation. They are all found in Beijing, China.
History[]
The palace was built in 1420 and named "Palace of Endless Good Omens" (Chinese: 启祥宫; pinyin: Qǐxiáng Gōng) by Jiajing Emperor in 1535. The palace was renamed as "Hall of Supreme Principle" in 1741. In 1860, Taiji hall was connected with Changchun Palace by converting its rear Tiyuan hall into Opera stage with veranda, where Empress Dowager Cixi could watch Peking opera performances.
Hall of the Supreme principle has five rooms, two side halls and rear hall. The Qixiang gate are equipped with wooden screen believed to protect the house from mischievous spirits. The main hall has gabled roof covered with yellow glazed tiles like most palaces in Forbidden City.[2] The beams are decorated with Suzhou style paintings, golden dragons and phoenixes. The walls are intricately decorated with medallions of phoenixes sitting on the mountain, untypically for other palaces.
Residents[]
Ming Dynasty[]
Year | Emperor | Imperial Consort | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1476-1522 | Chenghua | Empress Xiaohui | She became Empress Dowager Shou'an[3] but didn't have her
own residence as empress dowager |
1590 | Wanli | The palace became emperor's temporal residence
because 3 main palaces of Inner Court burnt down. | |
1640-1642 | Chongzhen Emperor | Imperial Noble Consort Gongshu | She moved out from Chengqian palace[4] |
Qing Dynasty[]
Year | Emperor | Imperial Consort | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1861-1874 | Xianfeng/Tongzhi | Empress Dowager Cixi | She was living also in Changchun palace as a regent of Tongzhi Emperor |
1872-1924 | Tongzhi | Imperial Noble Consort Xianzhe | She followed Puyi who was forced to leave the Forbidden City |
1908-1913 | Guangxu | Empress Dowager Longyu | She moved out from Zhongcui palace[5] |
Gallery[]
Taiji hall's screen
References[]
- ^ 魏/Wei, 莉/Li (2004). 从北京故宫到避暑山庄/"A review of the Forbidden city in Peking". 山东画报出版社/Shandong Typography. p. 42.
- ^ "清朝宫廷陈设欣赏,明清古典家具,红木家具,家具历史,家具文化_历史传承_中华古典家具网". www.cfucn.com. Retrieved 2020-08-19.
- ^ "香艷叢書"十六集卷四 /"The stories of Beauties", book 16, volume 4.
- ^ "田贵妃犯了大忌-生活日报数字报". paper.dzwww.com. Retrieved 2020-08-19.
- ^ "Hall of the Supreme Principle (Taiji dian)|The Palace Museum". en.dpm.org.cn. Retrieved 2020-08-19.
- Beijing
- Palaces
- Forbidden City
- People's Republic of China building and structure stubs