国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

USEUROPEAFRICAASIA 中文雙語Fran?ais
Lifestyle
Home / Lifestyle / Chinese-Way

Heaven on Earth

chinaculture.org | Updated: 2009-06-18 13:53

Heaven on Earth 

The Temple of Heaven, where emperors prayed for a good harvest, is now a Beijing landmark. 

Xi Cheng must be in her mid-80s but spins like a nimble ballerina to the tune of a lilting Chinese number. "Beijing is beautiful," she repeats. "I love the trees here and the flowers ... this is a singing and dancing park, I come here to dance everyday."

The power of the joie de vivre around her is infectious. The moment we stop to chat, a crowd swarms around and surrounds us near the gate of Tiantan, or the Temple of Heaven, one of Beijing's most famous landmarks.

Tiantan is an extensive arrangement of ancient Chinese architecture spread over 273 hectares of parkland and offers something for everyone.

Anthropologists will focus on the migration patterns of Xinjiang ethnic communities, who travel more than 1,500 km to Beijing in winter to dance on the Danbi Bridge. They all wear flame-colored harem pants and long tunics.

Sound engineers will marvel at the acoustics around the Imperial Vault, noting how a north-facing person standing on the central axis can be heard from behind the two halls on either side, 60 m apart.

And the thousands of everyday tourists will delight in getting togged up in Qing Dynasty costumes to be photographed sitting on a replica of the imperial throne.

Heaven on Earth

Locals enjoy a variety of outdoor activities, like dancing and tai chi, at the park. 

Former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger visited the site 14 times, but perhaps skipped the costume picture booth.

"Tiantan is more a political place than a temple," says Lu Yuxin, who has worked as a guide for about 12 years. "This was the only place where the emperor had to kowtow to a higher authority, in all other places he was supreme."

But the occasion was hardly a leveler. The elaborate rituals of fasting, change of clothes, animal sacrifice and playing of sacrificial music were performed in their designated areas, strictly off-limits to the public.

Begun in 1420 by Ming Emperor Yongle, the park was opened to the masses only in 1912. Two years later, General Yuan Shikai performed the last animal sacrifice in his bid to take on the role of the emperor. He died soon after.

During its imperial heyday, the sanctity of the temple grounds was taken very seriously. When the Hall of Prayer was struck by lightning in 1889, it was seen as divine punishment for allowing a caterpillar to crawl over the golden ball on its three-tiered roof. Thirty-two court dignitaries were executed for the lapse.

The ruined hall was totally rebuilt from scratch on the lines of the original Ming design. It has since seen several renovations, the last of these in 2005-06.

Built under Taoist "yin and yang" principles, the complex sits perfectly on Beijing's north-south axis, which cuts through the Forbidden City and travels further north to the Beijing Olympic area.

Almost 600 years after its construction, the Temple of Heaven dictated the location of the futuristic Bird's Nest and the luminescent Water Cube.

The idea of yin and yang - as in the binaries of light and darkness, positive and negative, circular heaven and square earth - also manifests itself in the people that it attracts.

The carnival of merry seniors exercising on parallel bars, moving in sync to the rhythm of tai chi or just having fun, kicking around a plumed jianzi (Chinese version of the shuttlecock), is almost evenly weighted by batches of schoolchildren clutching their satchels and exercise books, trying to get a look in through the cluster of human heads that seem to perennially crowd around the building entrances. There are no doors, but the interiors are cordoned off from the public.

The Temple of Heaven is probably the most ingenious example of a round edifice fitting happily into a square hole. The giant three-tier cylindrical structure of The Hall of Prayer for Good Harvests, mounted on a triple-layer marble altar, is set in a square courtyard. This pattern is repeated in the Imperial Vault, balanced on either side by the Echo Walls and again in the Altar to Heaven.

Taoists thought of the heaven as round and the earth as a square. So when the emperor, the intermediary between the heavenly beings and the mortals on earth, needed to solicit a good harvest on behalf of the earthlings, the place he chose to pray at, fittingly, reflected the metaphor of the meeting between earth and sky in its structural arrangement.

Tiantan is also a numerologist's ultimate fantasy. Each circular platform leading to the Hall of Prayer is nine steps above the last - nine being the highest positive single digit. The golden-tipped hall is 32 m high, is propped up by 28 pillars and no nails have been used in its construction. Four of the pillars are embossed with images of golden dragons, representing the four seasons, the 12 pillars surrounding them symbolizing 12 months, and the 12 outer ring pillars, the 12 divisions of day and night.

The obsession with numbers is taken to its height at the Circular Mound Altar. A single block of flat circular stone, where the Emperor would stand in the moment of his holy communion with the gods, stands atop three terraces, each approachable by four flights of stairs. The small marble disc is surrounded by blocks of artemisia leaf gray stones, spreading out in concentric circles, the number of slabs increasing in multiples of 9.

If the Forbidden City is the world's biggest siheyuan (courtyard residence), the giant barn-shaped Hall of Prayer for Good Harvests inside the temple grounds looks like its biggest granary.

At a time when the world's gaze is turned toward China, looking for some answers to sustaining livelihoods during a global economic crisis, the comparison assumes an added significance. Like Xi Cheng and her old friends, we live in hope.

Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

Registration Number: 130349
FOLLOW US
苍溪县| 商南县| 灵璧县| 栾川县| 商丘市| 郓城县| 寿宁县| 沈阳市| 灵石县| 贺兰县| 留坝县| 怀化市| 合肥市| 翁牛特旗| 金坛市| 育儿| 临泽县| 贞丰县| 红安县| 鸡西市| 台南市| 罗田县| 石楼县| 镇原县| 临湘市| 包头市| 贵州省| 福清市| 镇安县| 贵溪市| 八宿县| 海宁市| 南木林县| 团风县| 准格尔旗| 靖远县| 闸北区| 武定县| 瑞安市| 阳山县| 体育|