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Architecture in Ancient China

For most visitors to China, sightseeing means a daily
encounter with Chinese architecture of one type or another ranging from
temples through gardens, mausoleums, pagodas,imperial palaces to redsidential
houses.
The Forbidden City Beijing best exemplifies the elements
of palace architecture.Imposting Buildings like the three
great Halls of Harmony stand well-spaced along the central
axis, Facing south and rising from a terrace, these buildings
represent the supreme power and authority emperors enjoyed
during the feudalistic dynasties.
The living accommodations of the imperial family are found
at the back of the City. Clustered around the Great Halls
at a distance are numerous smaller buildings where the more
influential eunuches and concubines were locked in struggle
for power and infuluence.
To the south of the Forbidden City is the Temple of Heaven,
an exquistie example of what foreigners might call religious architecture,
for it was here that the emperor would go twice a year to carry out
ritual ceremonies of sacrifice, expressing gratitude to Heaven for the
previous harvest and praying for it to bless the coming one.Constructed
without the use of a singlenail, the round 39-meter-high Hall of Prayer
for Good Harvests has a three -tier roof.whose tiles are painted deep
blue, symbolizing the colour of heaven. The roof is supported by 28
pillars, of which the four most massive ones represent the four seasons.
The double ring consisting of two circles of twelve pillars represent
the 12 months, plus the tradtional divisions of the Chinese day, each
comprising of two hours.
Visitors
who see chinese buildings will invaribly notice the extensive
use of timber as a building material in addition to bricks
and tiles. That is because timeber was not only easily available
and transportable but was also very practical. Heavy posts
are capable of carrying the roof while the wood could be carved
for decoration and embellishment. After all, who fails to
be impressed by the highly elaborate decorations and embellishment
in those buildings?
Pagodas are as much a part of chinese scenery as churches
are in England. Tall or low massive or slender, pagodas dot China'a
landscape as evidence of Buddhist influence on and merge with Chinese
culture. The oldest existing pagoda, also built of wood, is located
in Yingxian county in north Shanxi, That the 67.13 meter-high pagoda
should have survived all the vicissitudes of life for moe than 900years,
including some strong earthquakes, was a miracle. Because it is out
of the way, most visitors do not see this pagoda. More frequently visited
pagodas are the Great Wild Goose Pagoda in xian, the Pagoda of Six Harmonies
in Hangzhou, and the Forest of Pagodas near shaolin Monastery in Henen,
central china,to name just a few.
What
is it that gives china's buildings unmistakeable chinese characteristics?
it is the combination of the massive, often cured roof. the
predominant use of timber, the terrace, the corbel constuction,
and the dazzlingly colourful decoration.
The roofs of chinese temples and palaces lend an air of
weightlessness to the generally large and massive buildings. The eaves,
lften slightly upturned, seem to let the entire roof float above the
building as if carried on invisible columns. Another way of achieving
this illusion of floating is the double roof. Here the roof is constructed
in two stages and the low wall separating the two suggests a small additional
storey. A practical funciton of upturned roof gutters is to ensure enough
light inside the building while making it easy to carry off rain water
Additionally, the roofs of palaces are covered with glazed tiles. As
the emperor's colour was yellow, those of the imperial palace are in
yellow. The temple of Heaven,on the other hand, is appropriately covered
in blue tiles.
Buildings
in china. be they temples or palaces or pagodas,rise invariably
from a terrace. That is as it should be, for the wooden frame,
however flexible it is, has to be protected from any ingress
of water. Old texts however, point to a symbolic cosmological
meaning when they state, "The Heaven covers and the Earth
carries. "The terrace in these terms represents the Earth
and the roof the Heaven. Thus we come to the recurrent theme
of ancient chinese philosophy, which is a complete harmony
between man and nature.
No discussion of traditional Chinese buildings can be
complete without a mention of the corble constuction. Developed
by chinese craftsmen over the centuries, it is the ultimate
form or style of chinese architecture that is the pride of
the chinese nation and the admiration of foreigners.
While posts and beams satisfy structural requirements and
are often built without the benefit of glue or nails corbles
and brackets are artfully combined into incredibly complex
and visually intriguing structures to support the roof. These
corbel system also give a clue to the social status of the
owner of a house because ordinary people were not permitted
to have; they were the prerogative of people of rank.
Decorations for ancient Chinese buildings
are largely of two types.i.e., colourful paintings and decorative
sculptures.The former plays a decorative, symbolic or protective
role. A classicexample is those found in the Long Corridor
of the Summer Palace in Beijing Decorative sculptures, which
are found both inside and outside the main buildings, range
from brick sculptures on walls, stone sculptures on balustrades,
to the small sculptures of mythological beasts atop a palace
or temple roof ridge and the large ones of men and beasts
in front of a mausoleum. For example, in front of the Hall
of Preserving Harmony there is 200-ton stone on the terrace
which is an intricately carved design of dragon and pheonix.
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