Showing posts with label China. Show all posts
Showing posts with label China. Show all posts

Sunday, February 9, 2014

Cixi and Beijing

Beijing: Boxer rebellion


All boxed in: Allied troops after the rebellion
'THE WELL of the Pearl Concubine" read the official notice in English. We peered at the small opening sealed by stone slabs. We were in the Forbidden City, once home to the Emperors of China.
Not far away, on the other side of the thick, pink walls, Beijing's traffic was pounding by and the Chinese version of yuppies hurried along the top of Tiananmen Square to their next appointment, mobile telephones clamped to their ears.
But in this quiet courtyard it was not hard to conjure another world: one in which eunuchs in silk shoes served banquets of a thousand courses and Manchu girls in jewelled, tasselled headdresses groomed empresses whose hair was considered so precious that the strands were plucked from the jade combs and stored in porcelain pagodas.
I was in Beijing to research a book about a pivotal event plotted and controlled from within these precincts a century ago. In the summer of 1900, an obscure peasant sect - nicknamed "Boxers" because of the martial arts they practised - rose up. With the encouragement of the elderly Empress Dowager of China, Cixi, on June 20, 1900, they began a siege of the foreign community in Beijing's diplomatic quarter which lasted 55 days.
An international army, led by Britain's General Gaselee, finally marched to Beijing. As this foreign force battered at the southern gates of the Forbidden City, Cixi cut her nine-inch-long fingernails and disguised herself as a peasant woman. She summoned her nephew, the Emperor, to the courtyard in which we were standing and ordered him to prepare to flee with her.
The Emperor's favourite, the Pearl Concubine, begged to be allowed to accompany him but an irritated and anxious Cixi, who had long resented the girl's influence, ordered the palace eunuchs to throw her down the well. It looks too small to accommodate any but the tiniest body, but our guide swore that the story is true, an example of the immorality of the decadent Manchu Court.
The 9,000-room Forbidden City has witnessed many violent scenes. The Ming Emperors began its construction in the 15th century, but it was seized by the Manchus who swept across the Great Wall in 1644 to establish the Qing Dynasty. The last Ming Emperor hanged himself in shame and despair from a tree which still clings to life in an adjoining park where today families picnic.
The Qing embellished their new possession, building with magnificent symmetry and symbolism. Five white marble bridges in the form of writhing dragons span the courtyard leading to the Supreme Harmony Gate, once designated solely for the Emperor's use. Beyond lies a vast space where 100,000 subjects could prostrate themselves before him. A series of grand ceremonial palaces, with names such as the Hall of Supreme Harmony and the Palace of Heavenly Purity, runs northward.
The crowds of Chinese visitors who sweep daily into the Forbidden City cluster in these halls to photograph each other in Manchu robes hired from nearby stalls. Many peer excitedly through the windows, pointing out the dusty, jewel-encrusted imperial thrones within.
I found the imperial living quarters, hidden away down labyrinthine passageways, more intriguing and atmospheric. Away from the tourist crowds, you can stroll around airy, vermilion-pillared pavilions furnished with low, brocade-covered couches, carved wooden screens and jade and cloisonn* ornaments. The dragon motif, symbol of the Son of Heaven, the Emperor, is everywhere, even embossed on the yellow-glazed roof tiles - a reminder that, apart from the eunuchs, he was the only man allowed, on pain of death, to spend the night here.
These more intimate areas evoked strongly for me the enigmatic Cixi, a woman rumoured to have had a voracious sexual appetite and whose enemies met untimely ends. She effectively ruled China for 40 years, dominating successive emperors.
She particularly loved plays and Chinese opera. The authorities have restored her brilliantly decorated theatre, with its cunningly contrived trap doors and concealed entrances through which elaborately and garishly painted demons would burst onto the stage. It has been done so well that I could easily imagine that she had just been applauding a performance from her balcony.
In her nearby apartments stands the yellow silk screen behind which she sat to take decisions of state since, as a woman, it would have been improper to reveal herself to her councillors. Her phoenix couch is in an adjacent chamber where, the foreign community gossiped, she received lovers smuggled into the palace.
Her portrait of Queen Victoria has gone, however. Cixi was fascinated by Victoria, another woman ruling in a man's world. She was eager to learn more about her and was particularly intrigued by her relationship with her Scots gillie, John Brown, wanting to know whether he was "cut off from the family way" - that is, a eunuch.
Nevertheless, her interest in the British queen did not prevent Cixi from loathing foreigners and encouraging the Boxers to wipe them out. The quarter where the foreigners fought for their lives, surviving on a diet of pony meat and rice, lies a few hundred yards to the south-east of the Forbidden City.
In 1900, it was surrounded by makeshift barricades and the humid summer air was sweet with the stench of decaying corpses. Traumatised survivors recalled how, at the height of the attacks, they saw Cixi standing on the Forbidden City walls and observing their bombardment with interest.
I still caught a strong sense of what the old foreign quarter must have been like, although the Hotel de Pekin and the shops that once sold Monopole Champagne to epicurean Manchu princes and suave diplomats are long gone. The walkway beneath the dual carriageway running into Tiananmen Square leads to the heart of the quarter. Walk along the avenue once known as Legation Street (now Dong jiao min xiang) and over the grey walls you glimpse shaded grounds and spacious European-style houses now put to other uses.
The former British legation compound, which formed the kernel of the foreigners' defences, still stands on what was once Canal Street (now Tai ji chang), running due south from the Forbidden City. It now houses the Ministries of State and Public Security. The stone royal coat of arms above the old gatehouse, from behind which British marines picked off Chinese snipers, has gone and the gatehouse itself has been turned into a shop selling security equipment. When, in 1959, the Chinese insisted that the British quit the compound, the British took relics of the siege to their new premises.
In the Ambassador's garden at the new embassy in the east of the city, I saw memorials to those who died and the battered, shot-marked bell cast for Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee which was used to sound the alarm at the most dangerous moments of the siege.
The brass eagle lectern presented to the British by grateful Americans after the relief now stands in the entrance to the Ambassador's house. It shows little sign of the damage it suffered when British diplomats used it to barricade a door against Red Guards who attacked the embassy during the the Cultural Revolution.
Many of Beijing's important landmarks have some association with the Boxer Rebellion. The Catholic Peitang Cathedral, where a force of French and Italian marines successfully defended 3,000 Chinese Christians against Boxers occupying the narrow lanes around it, lies just north of the Forbidden City, its fa?ade still pock-marked with shot and shell.
Today, taxi drivers offer tours around these timeless alleys where worm-eaten wooden doors lead into miniature courtyards filled with plants and raucous with caged songbirds. The smell of garlic mingles with frangipani and occasionally a whiff of sewage, a reminder that the foreigners of a century ago called the city Pekin-les-Odeurs.
South of the Forbidden City lies another building intimately, albeit ingloriously, connected with the Rebellion. The Temple of Heaven, completed under the Ming Emperors in 1420 and with an exquisite blue-tiled, domed hall, was regarded as the meeting place of heaven and earth. Every year the Emperor made sacrifices here to the gods. His annual pilgrimage to the temple was so sacred that the people of Beijing were forbidden to watch.
In 1900, monocled British officers feasted in the shrine where the Emperor had spent the night in fasting and prayer. They also staged amateur theatricals, causing a British magazine to rail: "This combination of vulgarity and indecency is one of the things which makes the English so much detested by other races."
Today, the temple precincts have recovered their dignity. People shadow-box and old men sit under the trees playing chess.
North-west of Beijing is Cixi's adored Summer Palace where she paused in her flight in 1900. This lakeside complex of pleasure gardens and pavilions has been rebuilt and restored many times; the current palace dates back to the 19th century.
The charming half-mile walkway, painted with Chinese birds, flowers and scenes from mythology, where Cixi and her ladies once strolled along the shores of Kunming Lake, is still there. So is the superb, two-tiered white marble boat which she built with money that was supposed to have been spent on the navy.
The Summer Palace was sacked by the Russians in 1900. Foreigners brought picnic hampers to the marble boat and rode their bicycles around the walkway, but the fabric has survived. Today, Chinese families go boating on the lake and fly kites in Cixi's pleasure gardens and the tourists mingle with them.
Cixi's attempt to get rid of the foreigners failed. Back in Beijing's new diplomatic quarter, I passed stalls hawking export surplus Calvin Klein underwear, copies of designer clothes and a few last Beanie Babies to enthusiastic foreigners. It reminded me how in 1900, before the Boxer storm, Chinese merchants happily sold silks, furs and pearls to eager foreign diplomats' wives. However many spasms have gripped this city since, some things remain the same. I wondered what Cixi would make of her capital today.

From:  Besieged in Peking' (Constable) by Diana Preston

The Tiantan park

June 9th 2013:  A cold and wet day in Beijing.  I was at the Zijin Cheng in the morning, and here we were, in the evening, with very little time, trying to understand another imperial structure, the Tiantan complex, some 2.7 sq kms of it, in an hour, even as closing time was upon us.

The Tiantan complex is supposedly larger than the Zijin Cheng, because the abode of the emperors could not possibly be larger than the abode of the gods could it?

The Ming and Qing emperors came here during the winter solstice to pray for a good harvest

The beautiful three-layered roof of the main Temple of Heaven was a modification.  Intially, it was built as a rectangular hall.

You approach it via these steps (in groups of nine), with marble balustrades.
The three eaves represent heaven, earth and the rest of the world, supposedly.  The work was beautiful. And seemed so perfect as well.
Hard to imagine that this complex was occupied by the British (yes, those very same colonials), during the shameful second Opium War, and joined by the French as well.  It supposedly served as their HQ through that war, and then in 1900, the Eight Nation Alliance also occupied this temple.

I found this picture from the National Archives of a German officer in front of the Eastern Gate of the complex.
But (atleast from what we saw in our hurried visit), none of this history or damage is evident in this complex, and the Tiantan Park is beautiful, and enjoyed by all sorts of Beijingers.

The Circular Wall is also called the Echo Wall
The archway through which you enter, and the vast and lovely woods all around

The bright decorations on the beams.  The whole place has no nails, we heard, and was rebuilt after a fire caused by lightning brought it down in 1889.

The main altar where the emperor prayed.  The interior roof was magnificent, but it was not possible to get a good picture.
The altar complex.  I wonder if there were sacrifices? 

The Circular Mound Altar, on which the emperor stood and prayed for good weather.  There are nine rings of stone, with the number of stones in each ring increasing as multiples of nine.  How cool is that? 

What were these?  i've forgotten now!
Someone with a sense of humour!
We could not gain entry into the other halls and temples, as the gates were gently shut in our faces.

But we walked the absolutely beautiful woods around, where I could have quite easily have spent an entire day.

There was a covered walkway where older Chinese played cards, carrom and even sang and danced!

Thanks to Yuan Shikai then for releasing this park into public domain.



There were magnificent cypress trees.  Supposedly there's one which is some 500 years old...I didnt bump into it.
One of the avenues....






Back into the bus, and looking back at the gate to the complex...out of one world and into modern Beijing once again.
We forged our way through rush hour, which, like everything in Beijing, is of monstrous and epic proportions.

I just loved the way  they have preserved these oases of peace, quiet and green in this urban jungle.

The city is endless and relentless, and I have never felt so much like a villager.

So is this what a city of the future  will be like?

It was good to escape the streets and go back into another wonderland of Chinese lanterns, fine dining and good company.


A couple of wine glasses later, I was cheery, light-headed and absorbed by the enigma of the old China that coexists with the new China, the two worlds quite separate it seemed, unlike India, where they bump into each other chaotically, constantly and overwhelmingly.

Sunday, January 26, 2014

A reminder of the Mongol presence in Dadu

Beijing Day 4.

On my way to Beihai park, following the instructions in the guide book about taking subway line 4 tp Pinganli station and then walking down Di'anmen West street to find the Behai park.

I leave the central business districts of Beijing and emerge onto a more Chinese street, cross Jiaochang Hutong and see a more relaxed pace of life.



Why was I on this excursion?  The words "Kublai Khan" had attracted my attention.  I was off to seek and find the only remnant of the Mongol's presence in Dadu, as ancient Beijing was called.

And the remnant was located in this park to the west of the Forbidden City.

I bought my ten yuan ticket and walked in through this little tunnel, and there it was in front of my eyes!

But the size and beauty of the park just blew me away.

Why oh why can we not have spaces like these in our cities?

Beautiful water bodies, lovely old trees and pavillions for us to sit and enjoy the views.

Turns out that Beihai is one of the oldest, largest and best-preserved parks in the city.
The white dagoba in the centre of that island was my supposed destination


These were imperial gardens that traced their origins back to 938 AD and the Liao dynasty.  They were opened up to the public only in 1925, remaining  as royal gardens  with every successive dynasty in between.

Something about water and mountains bringing luck led to the formation of these large lakes and the "mountain" islands in between.

So, in the middle of the large lake above is the Jade Flowery Islet which housed KK's Guanguan Palace.  KK received non other than Marco Polo there.  During his reign, the park became larger, and the city was called Dadu.  So this was the place he met his foreign dignitaries, hosted banquets, and carried out his emperor duties I suppose, and so the Marco Polo connection.

The Palace collapsed at some point, and in 1651 Shun Zhi built the white dagoba, which was what I came to see, thinking it was from KK's time. 

But I never did get to the island or that dagoba - I could not find a way in!!  My friends and family will quite understand my problem.  First I am easily distracted and secondly I have no sense of direction, so staying unlost itself is a miracle, leave alone finding my way on a map.

So as I got distracted I cam across all these other fascinating sights!
One of the several pavillions. This one was the entrance to the Heavenly King Hall


The protective "kings" looking fierce.

The DaCi Zhenru Hall made entirely of wood was beautiful.  I loved the unpainted appearance.This is from the M



The famous Nine dragons screen.  Was home to a huge colony of sparrows.  From the Qing dynasty, 1756.  Nine large dragons but a multitude of small dragons all over.

The screen has some 400+ tiles with seven colour screen printin that still hold their colour after all these years.  Quite amazing isnt it?  The Chinese also hold the number 9 in high regard.
As I walked along the lakefront, I came across the Five Dragon pavillions, where supposedly the royal family sat and "ate the air" so to speak

Beautiful spaces where the locals now come to chat, sing and bond.  Interestingly, they love to break into danec as well.
The Temple of Supreme Happiness. This was surrounded by little water tanks on all sides, ans was built by Emperor Qianlong for the eternal happiness of his mother. 

Within, Mount Sumeru, with the Bodhisattva and the 800 arhats.

The details of the roof


This stone stele was also built by emperor Qianlong and had inscriptions in Manchu, Tibetan, Mongolian and Chinese on its four sides.
It was half past twelve by now, and I had to be back by 2, and still I had not discovered the entrance to the White Dagoba island!
The White Dagoba.  Different from a pagoda in shape. 

So, I bade farewell to KK and hurried back.

So often, you go looking for something and find something else.  I ahd time to explore only the northern shore of the lake, but still it was a treat.

It was a beautiful morning, with lovely weather and somehwat clear skies (which is a huge thing for Beijing it seems), and what a lovely day to be in the park.

What a beautiful idea.  Calligraphy artists practise their work, with brushes dripped in water!


I left catching the train back to Gaumao from Beihai North.  Seemed a better way than the double change at Pinganli.

That afternoon, we went to the Summer Palace and found more beautiful royal gardens, now open to everyone, and serving as lovely places to spend time in the outdoors.

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Impressions of Xi'an - Terracotta Warriors and the Huaqing Hot Springs

Xian (known then as Chang-an) was the first capital of a unified China.  The gentleman who founded the city was also the man who fought against, and consolidated in ten short years, what were a group of squabbling kingdoms, creating the first unified kingdom, the kernel of modern China.  His wasn't a dynasty that survived his death (210BC), but that first act of consolidation is now considered seminal, and the country it gave birth to took its name from that of his dynasty - Qin (pronounced Chin).  He took the title Qin Shi Huang (The First Sovereign Emperor of Qin) and is now referred to as the First Emperor: apart from creating a united kingdom he built roads, consolidated the Great Wall, created an administrative structure and gave China the script that lives on to this day.  He created a vast mausoleum that he was eventually buried in and, in death, was guarded by a large army: the Terracotta Warriors.

The burial site is some forty kilometres east of Xian and is now easily accessed by an expressway.

 
After the collapse of the Qin dynasty, parts of the site were ravaged and set afire and then forgotten.  In 1974, amidst a drought, six brothers started digging a well at what they thought was a promising spot below the Lin Mountain.  As unexpected events go, this was a good one. The spot they picked turned out to be the southeastern corner of the site where the Warriors had been buried.  A few feet further east or south and the warriors might have remained buried and the site would have been just another undulation in the Chinese countryside.  There was more to the unexpected turn of events.  The Cultural Revolution was still raging, remember, and archaeologists were not exactly thick on the ground.  Those that remained were likely getting reeducated in revolutionary thought rather than practicing their profession.  As luck would have it, there was an archaeologist in a nearby village called Lintong.  Perhaps he was so far off the beaten track that the Cultural Revolution never caught up with him.  In any event, he came to hear about the broken shards of terracotta, recognized their significance, and moved to protect the site.


 
The death of Mao in 1976 and the changes that followed meant that excavating the site and reconstructing the warriors became a national priority.
Today, visitors enter the site via a large granite paved plaza.  (Granite paving appears to be the landscaping of choice for historical sites in Xian.) Manicured gardens, stands of trees and landscaping mean that the original mound of dirt is a forgotten memory.  Lintong, five kilometres west, is now a bustling town.

Entering Pit 1 of the Warriors' site
Restored Pit 1.  An amazing sight!

  The warriors, each one unique, now stand in proud rows, having lost only their coats of paint and their weapons to the centuries.  The site has been only partly excavated.  The vast majority of the warriors still lie buried, awaiting improvements in archaeological and restoration techniques.  What we see today is a live archaeological site.  The warriors themselves, large ranks going back many rows, are impressive.  Even more impressive is the way the dig has been displayed.  We see how the columns have been excavated, the packed earthen walls that separate the columns, the indentations made by the wooden beams that once provided a roof for the warriors, and much else.

The floors were rammed with earth and paved with bricks.

A sign shows us the spot of that 1974 well.
Parts of three pits have been excavated, and walkways surrounded the pits.  Crowds (almost all Chinese: there were only a handful of foreigners) walked around gaping, photographing, chattering: people were friendly and orderly and there was no pushing and shoving.




Pit 3 was completely different in layout, and was the command centre for the rest of the army.

Yet to be excavated.  Imprints of the fiber mats  that were part of the roof

 
A museum stood off to one side.  The exhibits were well displayed and labeled: originals, replicas, items loaned to, or borrowed from other museums.
A high ranking officer
Cavalryman with his horse

There was a bookshop with the usual coffee table books, postcards and assorted bric-a-brac.  An elderly man flanked by two minders sat in a chair signing books.  He was the man who had dug that well back in 1974.  He signed our book with a flourish: Chinese calligraphy, like Arabic calligraphy is so much more interesting, so much more aesthetic, than the mundane scripts adorning the streets and books of Chennai.
Emerging out, we were greeted by this long kite in the sky

We left the campus with mixed feelings of awe and regret: history usually remembers only tyrants.

 Huaqing hot springs


The way back to Xian took us through Lintong.  Our driver, like all the drivers we met in China, was uncommunicative.  Perhaps, like the rest, he spoke no English.  Perhaps Chinese drivers, unlike their Indian counterparts, prefer silence.  In any event, he pulled into a parking lot in Lintong and silently pointed us down the road.  For some reason: the weather, the topography with undulations and the mountains to our left, the roads themselves, this place reminded me of La Canada Flintridge in distant California.  Perhaps I was just a bit tired.


The Huaqing Hot Springs site is an odd agglomeration.  The hot spring still exists, bubbling into a fountain of sorts, and there were plenty of people splashing the water onto their faces and arms.  There is a rather nice garden and lake.  We posed for pictures, and an excited Chinese gentleman came running up and wanted his photograph taken with us.  So there we were, a Chinese, a Russian and an Indian, arms around each other, smiling under a clear early Chinese summer sky. 

The hot springs bubbling up
 
An excavated site, now enclosed, includes the Tang dynasty baths.  The surrounding walls carried a series of drawing depicting the great love affair of Emperor Xuanzong and his consort Yang Guifei.  As I saw it, the lovers, having overcome assorted obstacles and objections, eventually became swans (it could have been storks) and, together to the very end, flew off to heaven.  Sorry to say, it didn't bring a tear to my eye.  Perhaps I am too cynical for these romantic tales.
 The crabapple pool
 
The most interesting part of the site was a set of buildings where Chiang Kai Shek had his headquarters in the 1930s.  His office, bedroom and the room where an assassination attempt took place (bullet marks on the wall!) are all well preserved.  Chiang is everywhere referred to by his full title: Generalissimo.  Chiang and Mao were sworn enemies.  The communists defeated Chiang's Kuomintang in the late 1940s to take power, and Chiang fled to Taiwan, taking with him a host of treasures from the Forbidden City.  Chiang was enemy number one, in other words.  Yet here was Chiang, titled, and his history well preserved and far from airbrushed out of existence.  I suppose it was Chinese pragmatism once more: there are plenty of tourists from Taiwan these days and what better way to get their attention than an exhibit featuring the old Generalissimo.  I wonder what Mao would have made of all this.







Airports, and the roads that take you into the city, are not merely gateways.  One's first impressions of a country and a city are coloured by them, and first impressions leave their taint on everything that follows.
Our final hours in China took us past the old city walls, through suburbs, and onto the highway leading to the airport.  The suburbs were striking: a standing army of identikit 20-30 floor apartment blocks, most complete and, as far as we could see, unoccupied.  They looked well planned, with broad access roads, provision for shopping areas and large gardens.  American suburbia, scaled up vertically, lacking nothing but residents.  We had seen something similar in the far outskirts of Beijing and this was perhaps confirmation that at least some of China's recent growth was actually a real estate bubble.



The highway to the airport was as impressive as the one in Beijing and the airport itself had three modern terminals.  The quick efficiency of Beijing was missing, though.  We had to wait a while for the check-in counter to open.  The impatient queue that waited for the counter to open was more India than Singapore, and the time it took for the immigration formalities suggested that while the hardware was in place, the processes and people - the software - had some catching up to do.

Our transit in Hong Kong was further confirmation that China was still a work in progress.  Not that that was any consolation. Anna International Terminal in Chennai and the potholed and dimly lit highway outside confirmed that we cannot take even small pleasure in China's inadequacies.

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