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royalld | all galleries >> Dave's Occasional PhotoJournal >> Trip to China 2008 > September 18, 2008 Part III
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19-SEP-2008

September 18, 2008 Part III

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Sand taken from the moat that surrounds the Imperial City was used to build the hill that the Imperial Palace sits on.

So far we had transited Tiananmen Square and walked around the Hall of Supreme Harmony before entering the inner courtyards of the Old Palaces (Forbidden City)..

Along the way I learned that the height of a building’s threshold denoted the status of the resident. The higher the resident’s status, the higher his threshold.

Threshold height had a more practical role too. High thresholds kept flood waters, cold air, and crawling critters from easily entering the building.
Next we used the interlocking courtyards to reach the Hall of Consolation, also known as “where the Emperor goes to play”.


During the age of the Dynasties Manchurian women (girls) ages 13 to 17 were automatically engaged to the royal family, with the understanding that they might be drafted to be the Emperor’s concubine. If not selected by the age of 18 the women were free to have boyfriends or get married. A collection of small rooms or bays in the Hall of Consolation served as housing for the Emperor's many concubines.

The Old Palaces were guarded and served by eunuchs. These castrated men were trusted to be guardians and servants of the Emperor's concubines. Th eunuchs, more or less, had free reign to travel about the Forbidden City. One Emperor, his name is missing in my notes, had more than 100,000 eunuchs handling the domestic affairs of the Imperial City.

The Emperor traveled through the Imperial Gardens when he left his residence to go anywhere else in the Imperial city.

Cypress trees in the Imperal Garden were older than the Forbidden City itself.


Sand taken from the moat that surrounds the Imperial City was used to build the hill that the Imperial Palace (shown at top of this page) sits on.

Click here to see more of China


FujiFilm FinePix F31 fd
1/200s f/2.8 at 8.0mm iso200 full exif

other sizes: small medium original auto
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BleuEvanescence27-Nov-2008 08:39
Me too i am impressed by the doors...
Cindi Smith07-Oct-2008 03:22
Very nice! What huge doors! This is awesome!
Guest 06-Oct-2008 23:59
Looks like tourism is flourishing
laine8206-Oct-2008 22:27
This is a nice POV,
Guest 06-Oct-2008 22:16
Nice alignment on this shot.... Jv
J. Scott Coile06-Oct-2008 22:03
Rich. I'm so jealous!
Máire Uí Mhaicín06-Oct-2008 21:10
Thank you for this glimpse of another place, another time.
Guest 06-Oct-2008 18:29
very interesting, thanks for sharing.
Coleen Perilloux Landry06-Oct-2008 14:25
Again, wonderful photos. There is so much history there--some cruel, some beautiful.
Faye White06-Oct-2008 10:19
Fantastic fotos and fun facts! :)
Guest 06-Oct-2008 06:48
OMG , China, fabulous
Robin Reid06-Oct-2008 05:03
You are rasing the threshold of "travel blogs" on Pbase. Thank you.