Home China Tours Yangtze Cruises China Hotels Reservation About Us Terms Contact Us Feed Back
China Brief
China Guide
Tourism Cities
Landscape
Travel Festival
Super Value Tours
Yangtze Cruises Tours
Adventure Tours
Asia Culture Tours
Jewish History Tours
Special Interest Tours
Deluxe Tours
Customized Tours
Great Wall Marathon Tours
Mini-Package
-

Attractions

Wu Men (Meridian Gate)

  Frommer's Review


The trees leading up to this gate are recent additions. Originally no trees were planted along the Imperial Way, stretching over 2km (1 1/4 miles) from Da Qing Men (now demolished) to Qianqing Men (Gate of Heavenly Purity) in the Inner Court, as according to the "five processes" (wu xing), wood (green) subdues earth (yellow), the element associated with the emperor (hence the yellow glazed tiles). The Outer Court is also free of trees. Built in 1420 and last restored in 1801, Wu Men is the actual entrance to the Forbidden City. The emperor would sit atop the gate to receive prisoners of war, flanked by a battalion of imperial guards clad in full battle armor. The prisoners, clad in chains and red cloth, kneeled in the courtyard while charges were read before the emperor confirmed they would be taken to the marketplace for execution. The order would be repeated first by two, then four, then eight officers, until the entire battalion was thundering the edict in unison. The watchtowers extending out either side of the gate (que) are an expression of imperial power. This style was prevalent during the Han dynasty (206 B.C.-A.D. 220); this is the only example from the Ming and Qing.



See more about Attractions

  About Attractions
. Milu Yuan (Milu Park)
. Factory 798 (Qijiuba Gongchang)
. Wu Men (Meridian Gate)
. Wanshou Si
. Tian Yi Mu
. Taihe Men (Gate of Great Harmony)
. Taihe Dian (Hall of Great Harmony)
. Tai Miao
. Song Qingling Guju
. Seventeen-Arch Bridge (Shiqi Kong Qiao)
. Ri Tan Gongyuan (Ri Tan Park)
. Renshou Dian (Hall of Benevolence and Longevity)
. Zhonghe Dian (Hall of Middle Harmony)
. Ming City Wall Park

For payment, trip cancellation, please refer to the Terms & Conditions
For more information, please feel free to contact us at 1-800-865-6221 or email to us at info@chinacustomtours.com

TOP

More about Beijing
. Attractions
. Beijing Hotels