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The Forbidden City (New Horizons) /anglais

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The Forbidden City in Beijing is one of the greatest royal palaces in the and was the sacred centre of the Chinese empire. Despite political upheaval and social change in the rest of China, the life of rigid protocol and ritual in the Forbidden City remained unaltered, frozen in time, until the day when the modern world entered its long-closed gates and changed it for ever. This account is an insight into five centuries of Chinese history, from the beginnings of the palace in 1405 to its modern function as a museum.

Paperback

First published September 1, 1997

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for 7jane.
839 reviews371 followers
January 16, 2024
The Forbidden City is a really large, square-shaped, palace area, with first entrance point in the southern part of it. Founded in 1405 (and work began the next year, lasting for the next 14 years), it served as a winter palace for the emperor, his women, and other people necessary for managing it (though ‘external’ employees lived outside of it). It is a place of residences, temples, garden, and courts where people lived the life of rigid protocol and ritual until the days of the last emperor, best known as Puyi. I have see a document or two on how it’s still being restored, how it could stand earthquakes, and such.

The book is arranged so that the history of its emperors and other persons is told alongside facts about the palace area itself, and what life was like there.
The beginning of the building of the place started with Yongle, the 3rd Ming emperor, who moves the capital from Nanjing to Beijing (easier to handle the Mongol threat). The site of the Forbidden City was in the Yuan dynasty a palace that housed imperial offices. There is a great aerial photo of the whole thing in this chapter. The place ends up having 8886 rooms (not 9000 as it is claimed). The Manchus decide to keep staying in this place too, when they take over and begin the Qing dynasty in 1644.

We get introduced to three great emperors of that dynasty, after which things went into a gradual decline. These emperors ruled well, and had some Jesuits in their court, of great help. Some changes to the Forbidden City were made during the whole dynasty, but not very big ones. In these chapters on the emperors we are introduced more deeply into what the Forbidden City really had inside, and what the daily life within it was like for the emperor, his women, the eunuchs (with their love of wealth and power that brought the dynasty eventually down), palace maids, and the ‘external’ employees who lived elsewhere. The pictures give the reader a good view on how big, detailed, and great-looking the place was (and is).

The reasons for decline were because of many reasons: weak emperors, declining economy, foreign threat, rebellions and wars; and empress Cixi’s power, while great, suffered from being too detached from the country outside and its people, plus conservative thinking. So eventually Forbidden City became a museum, at first in a rather pathetic condition.

At the end is some documents, writings on our subject, mostly by Westerners. Things like ends of emperors, on eunuchs and concubines, tales about the place that are sometimes too imaginative (hello Jules Verne), prejudiced, or just odd (hello Kafka being Kafka). But also view on the end of empire (including some reminisces of the last emperor, Puyi – poor thing was so overwhelmed at the ceremony of becoming an emperor at 2 years old), visiting the place, and on filming the Bertolucci movie there. Following these writings is a list of the emperors of the two last dynasties, plus a map of China in 1759.

This is a quick-read book, with great pictures and a lot of information, much more than I could expect in something that slim. How the story was laid out was decent, and it was quite interesting, making you think of all those ups and downs that happen in history, here and in other places of the world.
195 reviews2 followers
February 11, 2021
C'est un petit fascicule sur l'histoire de la construction de la Cité interdite, les rois et leur gynécée, les rites et coutumes qu'il faut y observer, son fonctionnement, les eunuques, le faste et ses frais d'entretien peuvent ruiner les caisses du royaume.

Lorsque les Mandchous ont envahi la Chine et mis fin à la dynastie des Ming en 1644. C'est le début du règne des Qing, la Chine vit alors une nouvelle période de colonisation, après celle des Mongoles du XIII au XIVème siècle, et qui dure jusqu'au début du XXème siècle, dont Puyi est le dernier empereur.

Les filles choisies pour devenir Impératrices ou concubines, qui composent le gynécée de l'empereur, doivent absolument être Mandchoues.

A la fin du livre, l'auteur incorpore une série d'extraits de texte d'auteurs célèbres ayant visité la Cité Interdite
Profile Image for pauline.
134 reviews1 follower
February 27, 2026
Intéressant, surtout les témoignages sur la fin ✌️
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews