- Qianmen
The Qianmen (zh-stpl|s=前门|t=前門|p=Qiánmén|l=Front Gate) is the common name for the gateway known formally as Zhengyangmen (zh-stp|s=正阳门|t=正陽門|p=Zhèngyángmén; Manchu: Tob šuni duka). It is a gate in
Beijing ,China . It stands at the south end of theTiananmen Square precinct, and was formerly the front gate of the Inner City, a part of the ancient city ofBeijing .First built in 1419, the gateway consisted of a gatehouse proper and an archery tower, which forms a largebarbican . Today the archery tower and the gatehouse survive - though not in the form originally built. The present gates date from 1914 and incorporate modern design elements suggested by German advisors. At 42 metres high, the gatehouse was, and is, the tallest among all of the gates of Beijing.After the Communist victory in 1949, the gate complex was occupied by the
Beijing garrison of thePeople's Liberation Army . The military vacated the gate in 1980.Behind (that is, to the North of) the Qianmen once stood the Gate of China, followed by the present
Tiananmen , and theMeridian Gate , which is the front entrance to theForbidden City .Because of its grandeur and unique design, the Qianmen was long seen as the symbol of old Beijing.
Nearby is the Qianmen "
hutong ", named after the gatehouse.External links
Listening
* [http://www.theworld.org/?q=node/19262 Story about Qianmen "hutong"] from "The World" program, July 8, 2008
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