Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Hall of the Supreme Principle

Residence of imperial consorts in the Forbidden City From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hall of the Supreme Principle
Remove ads

The Hall of the Supreme Principle (simplified Chinese: 太极殿; traditional Chinese: 太極殿; pinyin: Tàijídiàn), also known as Taiji Hall, is one of the Six Western Palaces in the inner court of the Forbidden City.[1] It is situated west of the Palace of Eternal Longevity, north of the Palace of Eternal Spring, and south of the Hall of Mental Cultivation.

Thumb
Plaque of the Hall of the Supreme Principle
Remove ads

History

This residence was built in 1420 and was originally called the "Palace of Endlessness" (未央宫; Wèiyānggōng). As his father was born here, the Jiajing Emperor renamed it the "Palace of Endless Good Omens" (启祥宫; Qǐxiánggōng) in 1535. It received its current name in 1741, during the reign of the Qianlong Emperor.

In 1860, it was connected to the Palace of Eternal Spring by converting the back hall, Tiyuan Hall, into an opera stage where Empress Dowager Cixi could watch performances.

The Hall of the Supreme Principle has five rooms, two side halls, and a back hall. The main hall has a 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, atypical for other palaces.

Remove ads

Residents

Ming dynasty

More information Year, Emperor ...

Qing dynasty

More information Year, Emperor ...
Remove ads

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads