Mon, Sep 30, 11:34 AM CDT

Court-yard, Temple of Heaven Beijing, China 06/51

Photography Historical posted on Feb 28, 2007
Open full image in new tab Zoom on image
Close

Hover over top left image to zoom.
Click anywhere to exit.


Members remain the original copyright holder in all their materials here at Renderosity. Use of any of their material inconsistent with the terms and conditions set forth is prohibited and is considered an infringement of the copyrights of the respective holders unless specially stated otherwise.

Description


Court-yard, Temple of Heaven Beijing, China 06/51 Thanks for passing by my gallery!! Have a wonderful day Henk Construction of the Temple of Heaven stared in 1420, during the Ming dynasty under the Emperor Yongle. After Yongle had settled on Beijing as the site of the capital, the buildings and surrounding areas were later rebuilt and enlarged during the reigns of Jiaqing and Qianlong of the Qing dynasty. The general layout of the Temple of Heaven incorporates the ancient Chinese configuration of a 'round heaven and a square earth.' This symbolic form ties in to a north-south geographic alignment, with the concept of 'north-round-south square.' Two layers of walls surround the temple precincts. The outer wall's circumference is 6,553 meters with a space inside of 270,000 square meters, which is about four times the size of Beijing's Palace Museum. The site once occupied a large percentage of what was the outskirts of ancient Beijing. The Circular Altar has three layered terraces with white marble. During the Ming and Qing Dynasties (1368 A.D. - 1911 A.D.), the emperors would offer sacrifice to Heaven on the day of the Winter Solstice every year. This ceremony was to thank Heaven and hope everything would be good in the future. The Hall of Prayer for Good Harvest is a big palace with round roof and three layers of eaves. Inside the Hall are 28 huge posts. The four posts along the inner circle represent four seasons-spring, summer, autumn and winter; the 12 posts along the middle circle represent the 12 months; and 12 posts along the outer circle represent 12 Shichen (Shichen is a means of counting time in ancient China. One Shichen in the past equaled two hours and a whole day was divided into 12 Shichens). The roof is covered with black, yellow and green colored glaze representing the heavens, the earth and everything on earth. The Hall has a base named Altar for Grain Prayers which is made of three layers of white marble and has a height of six meters.

Comments (9)


)

TwoPynts

12:45PM | Wed, 28 February 2007

Nice one Henk, such impressive architecture. Thanks for the info too.

)

mark.spooner

12:46PM | Wed, 28 February 2007

Excellent work!

)

Ionel

1:49PM | Wed, 28 February 2007

Beautiful and interesting!

)

GiMi53

4:55PM | Wed, 28 February 2007

I really like the colors : the differen blues (the sky and the roof) and the "ocre" ! Beautiful image, very well presentated, Henk ! (I like the pano format) And once more, very interesting historical details provided ! see you soon... :~)

)

babuci

5:08PM | Wed, 28 February 2007

Very nice shot with a perfect compo!

)

sharky_

7:58PM | Wed, 28 February 2007

Excellent capture. Aloha

kjpweb

8:29PM | Wed, 28 February 2007

Wonderful image - great angle! Kudos!

)

DJB

12:14AM | Thu, 01 March 2007

I like this point of view. We built a parkade/store facility in this style, and when it was time for the roof tiles they came from China to do that part. I like this point of view.

)

Chaos911

10:26AM | Thu, 01 March 2007

what a F A N T A S T I C work!!!! super cooooool!!! :)


0 49 0

01
Days
:
12
Hrs
:
25
Mins
:
17
Secs
Premier Release Product
X-8 Rigged Claws for G8F
3D Models
Sale Item
$9.50 USD 40% Off
$5.70 USD

Privacy Notice

This site uses cookies to deliver the best experience. Our own cookies make user accounts and other features possible. Third-party cookies are used to display relevant ads and to analyze how Renderosity is used. By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understood our Terms of Service, including our Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy.