As the capital of China, Beijing is one of the world's truly imposing cities, with a 3,000-year history and 15.3 million people (2005). Covering 16,808 square kilometers in area, it is the political, cultural and economic center of the People�s Republic.
           
          
Situated in northeast         China, Beijing adjoins the Inner Mongolian Highland to the northwest and         the Great Northern Plain to the south. Five rivers run through the city,         connecting it to the eastern Bohai Sea. Administratively, the Beijing         municipality equals         the status         of a province, reporting directly to the central government.
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Rich in history, Beijing has been China�s primary capital for more than seven centuries. China�s imperial past and political present meet at Tiananmen square, where the Forbidden City palace of the emperors gives way to the Great Hall of the People congress building and the mausoleum of Chairman Mao Zedong. The old city walls have been replaced by ring roads, and many of the old residential districts of alleys and courtyard houses have been turned into high-rise hotels, office buildings, and department stores. Beijing, a dynamic city where the old and new intermingle, remains a magnet for visitors from inside and outside China.
Beijing is a city of         broad boulevards, now full of traffic and pulsating to the rhythms of         commerce and entertainment.  Museums         and parks abound, including the Palace Museum of the Forbidden City and         Beihai Park in the center of town. Nearby, the China Fine Arts Museum (Zhongguo         meishuguan) exhibits the work of contemporary artists. China�s         ancient past and recent history are on view at the Museum of Chinese         History and Chinese Revolution at Tiananmen. Antiques, crafts, and books         can be found at Liulichang, an old antique market district remodeled in         the 1980�s to reflect the style of the old city. Some of the spirit of         Old Beijing is also preserved at Qianmen, south of Tiananmen, with         stores that date to the early 20th century and beyond, including the         Tongrentang Traditional Medicine Shop, first established in 1669.         Beijing Opera performances and acrobatic troupes keep those traditional         entertainment forms vital, while contemporary music         clubs and discos thrive in an era of liberalization and         prosperity.
         
                    An Old          Street in          Downtown Beijing
         The Forbidden City (Imperial Palace,    Palace Museum, Gugong)
        
         The major ceremonial         buildings of the palace are aligned on a north-south axis that extends         beyond the walls toward the Temple         of Heaven complex and Yongding Gate in the south. The main         entrance to the palace complex is via the Meridian Gate (Wumen),         from which the New Year was announced each year by the emperor,         proclamations were read, and the fate of prisoners decided. Past five         white marble bridges and the Gate of Supreme Harmony, a great courtyard         could accommodate up to several thousand people for state ceremonies         such as the imperial weddings.          
         The three most         important ceremonial buildings are on the north-south axis, raised on a         high white marble terrace, and accessed by ramps carved with ornate         dragons over which the emperor was carried in a palanquin. The three         main halls and associated side buildings formed the outer courtyard of         the Forbidden City, devoted primarily to official and ceremonial         functions, but including imperial libraries and studies. The inner         chambers at the rear of the Forbidden City included private living and         sleeping quarters of the imperial family, divided into three palaces and         twelve courtyards. The Western Palaces were the residences of empresses,         concubines, and princes. The Eastern Palace halls are now used as museum         exhibition spaces,         devoted to ritual bronze vessels, ceramics, craft objects, antique         clocks, and paintings, including objects from the imperial collections         and archaeological finds. The back precincts include the Palace of Aging         Peacefully (Ningshou Gong) where the Qianlong Emperor of the late 18th         century spent his retirement years.                   
Official Site of The Forbidden City :
-     The Forbidden City of Beijing (with English and Japanese language links) 
                           
                 
                  Tiananmen    Square 
        
         
  Bird's    view of Tianan'men Square. Forbidden City on the top of the picture.
After the founding of the People�s Republic, Tiananmen Square became symbolic of the socialist state through the construction in 1959 of the Great Hall of the People on its western side, and the Museums of Chinese History and the Chinese Revolution on its eastern edge. In the same period, a Monument to the People�s Heroes was erected in the center of the square. In addition, following Chairman Mao Zedong�s death in 1976, a Chairman Mao Mausoleum building was erected directly on the main north-south axis of the square. It contains the preserved body of Mao in a crystal sarcophagus, along with a standing marble statue of the Chairman. China�s imperial past, revolutionary history, and political present are all represented vividly in Tiananmen Square.
                  Temple    of Heaven 
        
          The emperor, as Son of         Heaven, performed priestly as well as ruling functions. Each year on the         day of the winter solstice, following three days of fasting and         meditation, the emperor would offer sacrifices and pray for a good         harvest at the Altar of Heaven, a three-tiered round white marble         structure, built in 1530 and reconstructed in 1740. The round altar sits         on a square base, symbolic of the meeting of heaven and earth, a theme         carried through in the shape of the complex as a whole, a semicircle         atop a square.           
         Just north of the Altar         of Heaven is the octagonal Imperial Vault of Heaven building, which         contained tablets of the imperial ancestors and astronomical plaques of         the constellations and meteorological occurrences. The outer wall of the         Vault of Heaven Hall is known as the Echo Wall, from its ability to         transmit even whispered voices around its length. Farther north is the         Hall of Prayer for Good Harvests, originally built in 1420, remodeled in         1545, destroyed by lightning in 1889, and rebuilt in the following year,         in part using Oregon fir wood for the supporting pillars.           
         West of these buildings         is the Altar of Farming, where each year in spring the emperor         personally ploughed eight furrows to symbolically assure a good harvest.         The Hall of the Year Gods (now housing the Museum of Chinese         Architecture) was where the emperor sacrificed to the gods of the year         and asked for a good harvest.
Official Site of Temple of Heaven:
-     Temple of Heaven, Beijing (with English, Japanese, Korean language links) 
         
           Summer Palace
            Summer Palace
        
Official Site of Summer Palace:
-     Summer Palace of Beijing (with English, French, German, Japanese, Korean, Spanish, Russian language links) 
                           
         The    Great Wall 
        
The Ming sections of         the wall are only a late stage in a long history, much of which has         little to do with the present structures.          The wall is most often associated with the First Emperor of China         (Qin Shi Huangdi, reigned 221-210 BC),         who after unifying China by conquest undertook to link up previously         existing sections of walls belonging to conquered states, but on a         course far to the north of the present wall. The First Emperor mobilized         massive conscripted labor forces, including convicts and prisoners, by         some accounts up to a million strong, to conduct this building campaign.                   
While the Great Wall in its various versions had real military defensive functions, it also served symbolic purposes. For long periods Chinese populations lived north of the wall and nomads or semi-nomads lived south of it. The wall served as a symbolic reminder of dynastic authority and also of cultural distinction between settled agrarian culture and cities on the Chinese side and pastoral horsemen on the other. It continues today to serve as a marker of cultural and national identity.
      Beijing Hutong (Alleys)
  Beijing has about 4,550 alleys, which were scattered around the    Forbidden City. Most of the alleys came into being during the Yuan, Ming    and Qing dynasties. On both sides of the Hutong (alleys) are traditional    siheyuan, the traditional Chinese compound with houses around a    courtyard. The face-in structure has been seen as manifestation of the    introspective Chinese culture. One of the best ways to visit the alleys    is to go by pedicabs. With someone else pedaling for you, you just relax    and take a good look at the alleys. The best route for a pedicab tour is    around the Prince Gong�s Residence, where there are quite a few    interesting alleys like the Dajinsi (Big Golden Line), Xiaojinsi (Little    Golden Line), and Liuyin (Willow Shade) alleys.

 
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