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Beihai Park
Open: 08:00-17:00
Ticket: 5 yuan per person
West
of the Forbidden City sits Beihai Park (beihai gongyuan) which was
originally built for Kublai Khan before the Imperial Palace was
even imagined. The scale of the park is appropriately regal and
the huge lake is divided into three parts: Beihai(the North Lake),
Zhonghai(the Central Lake) and Nanhai(the South Lake).
A walk around the various scenic spots in Beihai is definitely enjoyable.
There are various places to take in along the way including: Jade
Islet Isle, the Jade Jar of Dushan, the Painted gallery, the Nine
Dragon Screen, the Liulige Tower, Yong'an Temple, the Five-Dragon
Pavilion. There is also an expensive but classy restaurant, "The
Fangshan" where reportedly the Empress Cixi used to dine!
Beihai is a peaceful place to wander and do some people watching.
In summer, some ignore the No-swimming signs and dive into the lakes.
In winter, skating is a popular pursuit.
Legend:
The original design for the park originates from an ancient tale.
Chinese legend has it that there were three islands across the eastern
seas where fairies and immortals lived: Penglai, Yingzhou and Fangzhang.
The celestial beings inhabiting these islands invented a wonderful
pill that made humans immortal. (Imagine an ancient Viagra and you
get the scale of the craze). Emperor Qingshihuang and Emperor Hanwudi
sent messengers across the seas in search of these wonderful pills,
but the messengers never returned. The Chinese emperors were forced
therefore, to settle for something less. They constructed their
own fairyland in the lake near their Palace as a comfort to themselves
and their un-realized dreams of being immortal.
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