Qing Tombs

Forbidden City 2005 Modern Beijing People Qing Tombs Scenes 1991 Summer Palace Temple of Heaven Tiananmen Square

Qing Tombs

photos from 1991 and 1996

 

 

diagram of the tomb valley

 

photo of the tomb valley

 

entrance to a tomb

The Qing (Ch'ing) Empire

After 1683 the Ch'ing rulers turned their attention to consolidating control over their frontiers. Taiwan became part of the empire, and military expeditions against perceived threats in north and west Asia created the largest empire China has ever known. From the late 17th to the early 18th century Ch'ing armies destroyed the Oyrat Empire based in Dzungaria and incorporated into the empire the region around the Koko Nor (Blue Lake) in Central Asia. In order to check Mongol power, a Chinese garrison and a resident official were posted in Lhasa, the centre of the Dge-lugs-pa (Yellow Hat sect) of Buddhism that was influential among Mongols as well as Tibetans. By the mid-18th century the land on both sides of the Tien Shan range as far west as Lake Balkhash had been annexed and renamed Sinkiang (“New Dominion”).

Text from Encyclopedia Britannica

 

 

tomb entrance detail

Military expansion was matched by the internal migration of Chinese settlers into parts of China that were dominated by aboriginal or non-Han ethnic groups. The evacuation of the south and southeast coast during the 1660s spurred the westward migration of an ethnic minority, the Hakka, who moved from the hills of southwest Fukien, northern Kwangtung, and southern Kiangsi. Although the Ch'ing dynasty tried to forbid migration into its homeland, Manchuria, in the 18th and 19th centuries Chinese settlers flowed into the fertile Liao River basin. Government policies encouraged Han movement into the southwest during the early 18th century, while Chinese traders and assimilated Chinese Muslims moved into Sinkiang and the other newly acquired territories. This period was punctuated by ethnic conflict stimulated by the Han Chinese takeover of former aboriginal territories and by fighting between different groups of Han Chinese.

Text from Encyclopedia Britannica

 

tomb park

 

entering on a rainy day

 

Ming Tombs

 

In the northwestern suburbs are tombs of most emperors of the Ming dynasty, who ruled in China from 1368 to 1644. The tombs are approached by the long Avenue of the Animals, lined with marble lions, elephants, camels, and horses.

Text from Microsoft Encarta

 

Avenue of the Animals

Ineptitude on the throne, bureaucratic factionalism at court, rivalries among Mongol generals, and ineffective supervision and coordination of provincial and local administration had gravely weakened the Yüan government by the 1340s. And in 1351 disastrous flooding of the Huang and Huai river basins aroused hundreds of thousands of long-oppressed Chinese peasants into open rebellion in northern Anhwei, southern Honan, and northern Hupeh provinces. Capitalizing on the breakdown of Yüan control, rebel movements spread rapidly and widely, especially throughout central China. By the mid-1360s large regional states had been created that openly flouted Yüan authority: Sung in the Huai Basin, under the nominal leadership of a mixed Manichaean-Buddhist secret-society leader named Han Lin-erh; Han in the central Yangtze Valley, under a onetime fisherman named Ch'en Yu-liang; Hsia in Szechwan, under an erstwhile general of the rebel Han regime named Ming Yü-chen; and Wu in the rich Yangtze Delta area, under a former Grand Canal boatman named Chang Shih-ch'eng. A onetime salt trader and smuggler named Fang Kuo-chen had simultaneously established an autonomous coastal satrapy in Chekiang. While Yüan chieftains contended with one another for dominance at the capital, Ta-tu (present-day Peking), and in the North China Plain, these rebel states to the south wrangled for survival and supremacy. Out of this turmoil emerged a new native dynasty called Ming (1368–1644).

Text from Encyclopedia Britannica


 

 

 

 

 

 

park pagoda

 

its interior

 

tomb entrance

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