Dan Snow's History Hit - The Forbidden City
Episode Date: February 26, 2026At the heart of Beijing sits the Forbidden City, one of the greatest architectural achievements in human history. It's the largest palace complex on Earth. Constructed in the early 15th century as the... hidden heart of imperial power, it was a city within a city — sealed off from the world, governed by rigid ritual, political intrigue, and absolute authority.How did a daring coup bring this colossal complex into existence? What was daily life really like behind its towering walls? And, how did it endure revolution, the rise and fall of dynasties, and catastrophe to become a symbol of China itself? Dan travels to the heart of Beijing to reveal its extraordinary story. You can learn more in Dan's History Hit TV documentary 'Beijing Central Axis: China's Medieval Wonder'. Sign up to watch at: https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe.Produced by Mariana Des Forges and edited by Dougal PatmoreYou can email the podcast at ds.hh@historyhit.com. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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For centuries, this was the sound of Beijing.
For the better part of 600 years, these mighty drums that surround me now in the upper story of the old drum tower kept time and did so across multiple dynasties.
The drums signalled the staff, the night watch and the changing of the guard.
And so it remained until well into the 20th century when Western timekeeping took their place.
Today, the drums can still be heard.
They're less functional now and more for ceremony,
an ancient rhythm beating at the heart of a very modern city.
And I really mean at the heart,
because if you've ever been to Beijing,
you'll know that nestled in its centre,
surrounded by soaring skyscrapers and bright LED billboards
and densely packed neighbourhoods,
lies the most extraordinary historic core,
laid out along a grand central axis
The drum tower where I am now is at one end and the imposing Yongding Meng Gate flanked by its carved stone lions at the other.
In between them, at the very heart of the city, stands the largest palace complex in the world,
a place from which for centuries China's emperors ruled from behind impenetrable walls.
This was a grand, mysterious court of ritual and ceremony, a place of political,
intrigue and brilliant ideas of family rivalries of love and death.
This was a place where China's dynasties rose and fell, a place where modern China was forged.
You're listed Dan Snow's history hit, and in today's episode I'm in Beijing to uncover the story of the
Forbidden City, China's Imperial Palace.
So I've come to the Jingxing Park now that sits between the drum tower and the forbidden
city on that monumental line of imperial buildings that runs north-south through the heart of old
Beijing. We think there's been a garden here since the 12th century, but it was really built up
from the 15th century by the Ming and then the Qing who occupied the city from then on.
It was their backyard, literally, until the 1920s. This is where they had imperial ceremonies,
and they would have quite literally lifted themselves up above the common people of China,
this vantage point, this artificial hill towering above the city, from the top of which
they could see out across the old city and their palace.
Today, I mean, you know, call me a revolutionary,
but I think it's great that normal people have been allowed in,
like me and my producer, Marianna DeForge.
It's beautiful lots of trees.
There's old people doing their chie-gong and doing their stretches.
There are young people babbling away into their phones.
There are middle-aged people babbling into their phone, sadly, as well.
Me.
And the reason I am babbling into my phone
is because I've come here to meet Dr. Jeremiah.
Jenny.
He called Beijing home for many years.
He taught Chinese history here.
You'll remember him from previous.
episodes, the pod about terracotta warriors and the opium wars.
And we must have given the taste script because he's now has his own podcast,
buy their own compass, so please check that out.
Jeremiah, great to see you, man.
Tell me about the occupation of Beijing.
How far back does it go as a settlement?
Beijing is the capital of China today.
But it's a really unusual place to have a capital city in modern times,
never mind in previous eras,
because it's one of the few capitals that doesn't sit on a major body of water.
So why even have a city here?
A lot of it has to do with Beijing's position
compared to the rest of Chinese civilization.
We look at a map of China today.
Beijing kind of looks like it's in the middle or the northern third,
but in fact, for much of Chinese history,
this was a frontier outpost.
It was the last stop before you cross these mountains
just to the north of Beijing.
If you've ever been driving down the highway
and you see a sign saying last stop for petrol, 150 kilometers,
there really wasn't a sign outside of the city.
cities in the spot that said last stop of civilization for as far as you can walk, but there
might as well have been. And so for much of the city's history, for as long as it's been
people here, and there's been a city that we know of in this spot going back about 3,000 years.
But for the first 2,000 or so of these years, it was maybe a regionally important city,
but mostly it was a place where you'd gather your trade goods together and you would head out
to the pass. If you went left, those were the Silk Roads, or in later dynasties, it was a place
where you would gather your military together
before you would head out these mountain passes,
go right, and try to invade Korea,
which is a favorite pastime of several earlier emperors.
So if we think about Beijing being this frontier city,
it really is interesting that the people from outside this frontier
are the ones who put Beijing on the map as a capital,
beginning with a group called the Kitan in about the 11th century,
and then they were replaced in the 12th century
by another group from outside the frontier called the Jin,
and both of these groups had come in,
they had conquered progressively larger sections of North China,
and for them, where we are right now,
and what's today Beijing,
this wasn't the last stop out for civilization.
It was the first step in.
And so they established capitals in this spot.
And of course, the Qitan and the Jin were replaced by an even more famous group,
and that was, of course, the Mongols under first Genghis Khan
and then his descendants.
And his descendant Kublai Khan,
when he established himself as the ruler,
over a vast area, including what's today China.
He decided to move his capital to this spot.
He built his capital right here as well.
And that's really the beginnings of Beijing,
the city that we visit today.
The Mongols hadn't really been an urban civilization.
How do they choose to build this new city?
How they lay it out?
So if you look at the footprint,
you have the rectangular walls, you have the broad boulevards,
the avenues, the gates, the palace in the middle,
all very proper.
But then also in the middle of that palace,
you have large open courtyards
where they set up,
giant felt tents and yurts structures that they're a little bit more comfortable with
than, say, drafty palaces and things like that.
The Mongols occupied Beijing for roughly 150 years until the mid-14th century,
when they were ousted by a Chinese group from the south, the Ming, who sacked the Mongol capital,
then known as Dardu.
But when the Ming took control of their first emperor, Hongwu, didn't establish his dynastic
capital in the Sacked ruins. Instead, he moved it south, back to his home, to where the modern-day
city of Nanjing now stands. Hongwu emperor governed with an iron fist. He rebuilt the economy,
he strengthened the military, he consolidated Ming authority after decades of foreign rule,
but at the end of the 14th century, his successors quarreled between themselves. It was a
vicious civil war within the family, and his southern capital was destroyed. His
fourth son, Judee, as a skillful general, based on the northern frontier, well, he emerged victorious.
He established himself on the throne in 1402 and took the name Yongle. It was a new century
and a new era for the Ming. And so this new emperor, Yongle, decides, if I'm going to rebuild
and I have to rebuild, why don't I rebuild where my power base has long been? And his power base
had long been in the north.
And so he chooses to rebuild his capital
on top of the old Mongolian capital,
what had been the city of Dadau, now, Beijing,
and Nanjing was demoted to secondary capital.
And how does he change a city?
So the act of building a capital,
it establishes you hope this idea
that you've received the mandate of heaven.
You're not just a usurper, but you're the emperor,
and it's been recognized by heaven, earth, and humanity.
And so one of the first things you're going to have to do,
is to rebuild the palace.
The Yongleur Emperor set his sights on something monumental,
a vast imperial palace,
anchored at the heart of an eight-kilometer north-south spine of royal landmarks,
what we now call Beijing's central axis.
In the 15th century, a project on that scale was staggering.
To grasp the sheer ambition of it,
Jeremiah is taking me to the Beijing Planning Exhibition Hall,
home to an extraordinary scale model of Beijing
that stretches across the floor of a vast atrium.
So, Jeremiah, you have brought me to this museum now,
and you promised that as a fellow model and map fan
I was going to like this place.
And I am freaking out now.
Describe what we got here.
It's about 20, 30 meters long?
That's right.
So what we have here is a model of the central axis of Beijing
to scale, more or less.
And you see all the major sites along the central axis,
starting from the Yongding Gate at the far end,
the southern end, through to what's today,
Tiananmen Square, the forbidden city, the hill, just north of the forbidden city, Jingshan,
and then finally, originally ending at the two towers, the drum and bell tower that used to keep
time in the imperial city. So talk to me about the development of the axis, the Yongla emperor.
Is he building on something that's gone before? Is this a new idea?
In some ways, the shapes of the walls, not quite as large, but more or less in the same place.
The palace, the forbidden city, more or less in the same place as Kublai Khan's palace,
as far as we know.
So he's very much renewing what was already there,
and that includes presumably this idea of a central axis.
That's right.
So the central axis goes back to at least the idea of Kublai Khan's Dadu, or Great Capital.
And we can see on models and maps of that an axis very similar to this one,
although almost all the buildings, if not all the buildings,
on the current central access due date from the Ming period or the slightly later Qing Dynasty,
we're talking about the 16th, 17th, 18th century.
So what you ultimately have is this palace at the heart of this new capital situated on this north-south axis.
One of the guidelines they would use for citing a palace, citing an access was, of course, the North Star Polaris.
Ritual text would say you had to do a sight line at night about the North Star.
And in the Chinese cosmology, the North Star, everything revolves around the North Star and the heavens.
This is the terrestrial equivalent, because all of the Chinese.
orbit around the power of the emperor here in his palace.
And this grand palace became known as the Forbidden City, with its 9,99 rooms, allegedly.
It is the largest palace complex in the world still today.
So between 1406 and 1421, it took about 16 years or so.
Over 100,000 craftsmen and architects and over 1 million laborers participated in the construction
of these palaces.
And what I find most interesting about that,
thinking of modern logistics,
is the first 10 years or so,
there really wasn't any actual construction being done.
It was all about bringing the materials here,
the wood, the marble, everything that was needed,
putting it in place and then putting it all together.
Are they deliberately bringing products in from all over the empire
to symbolize the oneness of the empire here?
I think that might be some of it,
but a lot of it is just they want the best of the best.
And if they can source it locally, they will.
But even though a lot of the best stone can be quarried
in North China where Beijing is located,
it's still not in the immediate area around Beijing.
So you still have this need to move impossibly heavy
and impossibly large numbers and materials great distances.
If it's wood, one of the great things about it,
you float it down the river.
And so wood can be transported a little bit easier
than say stone.
For stone, they had to get creative.
Did that involve dragging?
When I take students to the forbidden city, I always put the problem to them.
You're an engineer in the Ming Dynasty.
You have to move a 200 ton block of stone intact to the forbidden city or to the building site.
How do you do it?
And the students always say, well, you get, you have all these people, just have them drag it.
I'm like, they just can't do that.
So you have to reduce friction.
And so one of the things that they would do to bring the stones to the forbidden city or any major building site,
they would do it in the winter.
No way.
either along frozen canals or where canals wouldn't work,
you would flood the road, let it freeze,
and push it along these ice roads to move these incredible chunks of building materials,
great distances.
And this era, the Ming Dynasty, is famous for its building projects.
We think, of course, of the modern great, great wall.
And one of the reasons why this is able to be done
is because of the industrial production of materials beginning in the Ming Dynasty.
You also have a very developed system of at least at first Corvay labor that allows you to put a lot of manpower, a lot of human power into these projects.
It's like conscription, but not for the military, but for engineering projects.
Yeah, you pay your taxes through labor.
And that was the way it was, at least in the earliest days of the Ming Dynasty.
It is true when you look at places like the Forbidden City and you think to yourself, it is amazing what you can do if you have some of the best minds of the empire, some of the best materials.
materials in the empire and an endless supply of inexpensive non-union labor.
It's amazing, which you can accomplish.
And I suppose there was an ambition that would last long time, and indeed it has.
There's an idea that the site would be eternal.
But one of the interesting things about the Forbidden City, and this is true of a lot of sites in China,
the site is meant to be eternal.
The buildings themselves are replaceable.
And the idea is that many of the buildings are built with wooden columns.
They're supporting great wooden beams, but wood will eventually wear out.
And that's okay.
How long did it take to build this astonishing place?
So the forbidden city would have been constructed beginning around 1406.
Construction ended around 1420, and it officially, if you will, opened in 1421.
Although the grand opening was marred somewhat when that same year a lightning bolt struck the main ritual.
they say it was lightning bolt, it caught on fire. The main ritual hall was today called the
Hall of Supreme Harmony burned down, which if you're into cosmologic omens and let's just say
that the Chinese emperors were, that's not a particularly auspicious beginning.
But it's very striking because 15 years isn't far off what a massive infrastructure build
would take today. I mean, that wouldn't be unusual. So it's fascinating, isn't it,
how we might have replaced humans with machines, but it's similar sort of timeframes.
And the way it was built too, Dan, it's actually hard to replicate in the modern day
because many, most, in fact, of these wooden structures, they're put together without nails,
screws, metal brackets.
It's all perfectly cut beams, brackets, columns that are then put together, all made of wood,
and they then all fit together perfectly.
When this enormous construction project was finally finished in 1421, there was astonishing
procession.
You could just imagine it.
swept the Yongle Emperor alongside his family and his court, his government, all the way up
to the Forbidden City, to the Imperial Palace, and they were installed inside. They took up residence.
I'm just entering now the first of these gigantic courtyards. And all around me I can see these
beautiful yellow roofs. The colour yellow was exclusively for use on imperial buildings. And if you
look closely at the designs on these buildings, you can see the blue Lapis lazuli,
and you can see dragons. Lots of dragons everywhere. The similar.
of the Imperial family, there's certain dragons with the right number of claws.
They are reserved for the Emperor himself.
And as you go further into the Forbidden City, you get to the grand central halls,
the throne room for example, which has got something like 13,000 dragons inside and out.
A scale of this place is unimaginable, 980 buildings, something like 10,000 rooms,
720,000 square meters.
You can fit Buckingham Palace into this site five times.
It's said to be the most visited historic site in the world.
Something like 40,000 people a day, that's twice the number of people that visit the Coliseum in Rome.
And on this freezing cold November day, it is already absolutely rammed with people.
Many of the women have obviously spent hours in wardrobe hair and makeup
because like a significant proportion of them, dressed in Qing Dynasty outfits,
hair, headgear and makeup perfectly set.
The costumes rented nearby.
Lots of stunning colours, lots of fur-lined garments,
lots of Instagram boyfriends trailing along beside them
loaded down with photographic equipment.
There's some content going to get produced here today.
I'm pleased to say that my superficial impression
at this place is now going to be massively added onto
by a conversation with Matthew Hugh.
He is a Chinese cultural heritage preservationist and expert,
and he's going to help me really understand what exactly is going on here.
Matthew, how are you?
Very good, thank you.
Very good to see you.
Yeah, very good to see you too.
So it was originally called the Purple Forbidden City, as I understand it.
What's the significance of that?
Well, because Asian Chinese would like to believe that the Asian emperors,
they were bequested with this power.
to rule the world because they represent this master principle defined by the constellations in the sky.
And there are three groups of constellations in the middle of the heaven,
and the middle one of the three is called a purple constellation.
So that's where the god of heaven reside as his heavenly palace.
So the Chinese emperor, no matter which dynasty,
They always consider themselves as the sun of the heaven.
So as the son of heaven, whenever they build their own palaces,
they would like to build a earthly mirror reflection of that heavenly palace.
So that's why they call it the purple forbidden city.
You enter through a magnificent gate.
You are greeted with the river that flows,
and what's the importance of the water there?
It's actually both symbolic and also functional.
The functional side of the water canal was to provide very important sources of water in case of fire,
because most of the buildings were made of wood.
In fact, the whole supreme harmony has been burned down four or five times over history.
So the one we saw today is the fifth or sixth version of it.
The symbolic aspect of that water canal is that if you look from above, it looks like a bowl,
the shape of an archery ball.
So you will see five bridges.
This marble bridges symbolizing five arrows shooting to the earthly world that governed by this heavenly sun.
And each arrow symbolizing one virtue that has been...
for many centuries embraced by Confucianism.
So like benevolence, for example,
so that's one of the five virtues.
So you need to be good to your people
so that the world will be in harmony.
So that's the whole purpose of why they eventually
named the main hall of the palace
as the hall of supreme harmony.
So that's really an art of keeping balance.
So you go across that canal.
canal. Would you say at the heart of the forbidden city is the building that's raised highest of all,
and that is what we call now the Hall of Supreme Home? Yes. What happened in there? That's the place
where the emperor had his court audience. Traditionally, that's supposed to be a throne hall. So there's
a golden throne in the middle of the palace. It's paved with this kind of golden bricks.
And it's a very colorful, shining. And the emperor would be the only one sitting.
So all the other courtiers, ministers, would be on both sides flanking the emperor,
and each one of them will be boring, koto, and they will report to the emperor.
So that would be the place where most of the important decisions, policies being made in the imperial time.
And the morning audience in the past was very early.
So basically, the emperor would get up and got ready for the morning audience,
maybe at about three or four o'clock in the morning.
So they will have to get up, get dressed,
had a little something to eat, maybe a dumpling.
You can imagine that all the courtiers,
they will get out even earlier
because they have to come into the palace.
So maybe two o'clock they'll have to get up.
It looks like a fortress in some ways, doesn't it?
Big moat, big walls.
Are those ceremonial defences?
Do you think they were ever intended to withstand a siege?
I think it's mainly a ceremonial,
And in fact, foreign envoy coming to Beijing, he would come through one gate after another,
following a very narrow but long procession, about one kilometer before he could actually reach the main gate of the forbidden city.
That's a statement that you are getting closer and closer to the emperor.
And eventually you see a grand building with this main gate.
And once you go in, you see on such a big open plaza, you see the whole of Supreme Harmony.
So that was terrifying.
All the trade deals you came up with, you may be, oh, forget about it.
Yeah, I was determined to give him a peace of my mind.
Now I'm not so sure.
Why did it get the name Forbidden City?
Is that historic or is that?
I think it was because that was forbidden.
They were not allowed to go in without permission.
Only certified personnel could enter.
The forbidden city was actually divided into two halves.
So the front half is the outer court.
And the second half is the inner palaces.
So one is a space dealing with state affairs.
So it's more official.
But the second half is more personal.
So it's the family space.
So family time would be the second half.
Once you get to the living quarters, the size of the buildings are smaller.
And behind the living quarters, of course, that's the garden area.
That's even more fun because you have a lot more unique stuff.
It's a lot less regulated.
In the imperial garden, in the living quarters, you see a lot more plants.
You have to picture in your mind would be those animals that the emperor raised,
as pets. So they raise cranes, for example. They do have cats and dogs, but some of the unique
stuff would be cranes. And deer, they're both symbolic animals for longevity and also related
to immortals. But we consider the forbidden seat as the residence of the imperial family. It hosted
24 emperors over the past six centuries. I've been to lots of palaces and
in Europe, and often there's very grand state rooms, but some of the kitchens and the back
areas are a bit shabby, even the domestic spaces.
What's your sense of the thousands of rooms in this palace?
It really depends on the financial status of the empire.
I think in the peak era, I think it's relatively well-furbished everywhere.
But of course, for the kitchen, for the servants' area, for hierarchy reason, they couldn't
be over-decorated.
Basically every bit of the house has a regulated way of being decorated.
One place that I love most is the Imperial Library.
That's a two-story building covered with black colored glazed tiles.
The reason that we used the black tiles was because black symbolizing water in the Chinese
five-element theory.
So we have gold, wood, water, fire, and earth.
So the five elements, black symbolizing water.
And as a library, of course, made of paper.
The building itself already very easy to be burned down.
The paper books, very good burning materials.
So they cover that with black tiles.
And inside was Chinese version of the encyclopedia created by Amber Chen Long.
I believe the total number of characters for this encyclopedia piece was about 800 million
Chinese characters.
So it takes any scholar, perhaps a lifetime really, to read them.
But it's very comprehensive.
It covers almost every aspect of Chinese life.
So we have three and a half sets.
So that's one of the most interesting places I would suggest.
Because most people tends to just to go through the central axis line, but skis.
this little courtyard which has this beautiful library and of course in front of the
library there's a water pound I bet there's to make sure that they have enough
supply of water what a treasure in the living quarters on each side of the
empress residents on the east side and on the west side there were six
palaces built for the concubine one of this six on the east side was burned down
in the late Qing dynasty.
And in 1905, the Qing court was considering to create our own constitution.
So we are trying to build up our constitutional monarchy.
But how to do that?
So they send a delegation to travel overseas to study from your experiences,
from the French, German, Japanese, they travel to many countries over maybe 14, 15 months.
But they came back not only with their study of the political system,
but also come back with some interesting findings
about how the Western people entertain themselves.
So they came back with an idea of Western aquarium.
So they actually thought, you know,
maybe we can entertain the Empress Dowager
and the emperor with this aquarium thing.
Because I'm sure the ministers who represented
the Chinese emperor on this year-long journey.
We're quite impressed with some of the terms you had.
They're cool.
So they actually hired a Western designer.
But unfortunately, it's a long decision-making process.
And all during this kind of places,
according to the size of this courtyard,
also very difficult.
So by the time they come up with the skeleton pieces,
it's 1911.
So Revolution broke out.
So never were able to complete that project.
Very sad.
Very sad.
But that's a very interesting piece
because when they designed the building,
they designed it.
It's a hybrid of both Western and the Chinese aesthetics.
So it has a provision-like building
or your bell tower, like you know, go to church,
you have a little bell tower.
That top looks like doom.
And so you have a staircase.
It's like a building surrounded with a mini-mode.
But once you go in, you actually have take steps to go down.
One level down, go to basement level.
And there's glasses on four sides.
You can look out.
And on this canal, in this canal, you have perhaps all kinds of weird fishes or turtles
or maybe even crop dolls that you can raise.
and so the emperor can enjoy looking at all these different species.
That's a lovely creation, but never being completed.
The Forbidden City served as China's imperial palace for more than 500 years.
As Matthew explains, it was home to 24 emperors, 14 from the Ming Dynasty,
followed by 10 from the Qing.
And those early Ming years marked something of a golden age,
a period of prosperity and cultural blossoming,
as China reasserted itself after decades of foreign Mongol rule.
This is Jeremiah Jenny again.
So the Ming dynasty rules China officially from 1368 until 1644.
I think a lot of what we see in the later imperial period
that Ming set the foundations of,
not just physically in Beijing and the Forbidden City,
but also in terms of how they approach the organization of the bureaucracy,
the role of the emperor.
When we take a look at the era as a whole,
what we do also see is an amazing era of literature,
cultural flourishing, painting.
It's when the economy of what we think of as today, China,
becomes a lot more sophisticated, a lot more urbanized.
There's a lot going on,
apart from the fact that we have very often
some very weak and ineffectual emperors
sitting in the Forbidden City.
But like most royal courts throughout history,
the Forbidden City was rife with scheming advisors
and power-hungry aids,
quietly trying to climb the greasy pole.
This was a dynasty that at one point misplaced an emperor.
They went out to fight the Mongolians,
and when they all rushed back to Beijing
after being defeated, they looked around him and were like,
wait, I thought he was with you.
They had left him behind in the battlefield.
This was also a dynasty where they had an emperor
who ruled for a long time,
but spent the last 20 years of his rule in his bedroom
because he just got tired of being an emperor
and refused to come out.
And here's the thing,
whether you're talking about ancient Rome or Ming Dynasty China.
If emperors refuse to play or if emperors are not very good at politics,
there are plenty of powers in the palace who are more than willing to step in.
In the case of the Ming Dynasty, you have unscrupulous officials, corrupt eunuchs,
imperial in-laws, all kinds of intrigue, which also makes the Ming Dynasty a very rich era
for stories, novels, legends, and tales of people up to no good.
So it sounds to me like it's remarkable the Ming flourish for so long because actually they
do have a pretty good run of it.
They do.
A lot of that is due to a bureaucracy that's able to keep the government functioning even if
you have a relatively weak emperor.
Although the Ming dynasty, unlike their successors, the Qing, there was a critical flaw
in this system.
And that was the first emperor of the Ming dynasty, the Hongwu emperor, was an incredibly, if we will,
effective ruler, brutal at times.
But he as a young man fought against the Mongolia's,
fought in a civil war, was one of the first commoners
to become emperor in over 1,500 years.
So here's a guy who knows how to get things done.
And when he installs himself as the emperor,
one of the things he does, because he doesn't trust
these elite, deep state officials.
He abolishes the office that we might think of as prime minister,
or the person who's kind of head of the government,
and decides to take on the job himself.
Which is okay if you are a paranoid,
freak workaholic like the Hongwu emperor, or even a highly effective, if brutal, despot
like the Yongle emperor.
But as we go through history and we have emperors who wanted to be carpenters or emperors
who refuse to come out of their bedroom, what you have then is a government that doesn't
necessarily have that unifying executive figure, and that would often cause problems, allowing
things like corruption, bureaucratic rot to set in.
Why eventually does the Ming project peter out?
Part of it is that a succession of weak emperors is only so long the bureaucracy can hold things together.
Having a weak emperor is okay when things are going fine, but when you start to have major problems,
then you need strong leadership to fix those problems.
And by the early 17th century, two problems emerged that will really test the ability of the Ming Dynasty to hold on to power.
The first one is a change in the climate, if you will.
There are famines happening.
And this is part of a process that we see reflected in the world.
other places, other historical context of a little ice age, if you will, in the early 17th century.
This causes crop failures. And now in an effective government in China, you could move grain around,
you could open up the granaries. But by this point, because of problems in leadership,
that kind of relief was not forthcoming. And when people are hungry, they're very susceptible
to suggestions like, hey, I'm a rebel leader. Will you join my army? People will do a lot of
things if it comes with the promise of food attached.
And so not only do you have these problems of famine, but then you also have rising up very
large what the palace calls bandits, but again, we might call people who are so hungry
they will do anything.
And these armies start roaming across the territory.
And eventually one of these large armies makes its way all the way to Beijing, one of
these rebel armies, and takes the city in 1644.
You're listening to Dan Snow's history yet.
There's more to come.
Across the countryside, this famine and desperation sparked Wei's rebellion.
One man, Li Zhuge Chung, a former postal worker, emerged from the chaos, promising fair taxes and land for the poor.
He raised a rebel army that swept across China, and in 1644 they marched on Beijing itself.
His forces entered the city, and the last Ming emperor, Chong Zhen, fled and took his own life to avoid the dishonour of
surrender. But it would not be Li Zhur Chung's rebels who took power. To the northeast of Beijing,
beyond the wall, another army was waiting. The Manchu's poised to invade a weakened China.
Caught between the rebels who controlled Beijing and an invasion force to the north,
the Ming general Wu Sangui made a fateful choice. He opened the gates of the Great Wall.
army stormed through, they crushed Li Jue Chung's rebellion and seized Beijing. The Ming era
was over. The Manchu now claimed the mandate of heaven and ushered in a new imperial age.
From 1644 until 1912, they rule this massive empire with modern-day China as its core.
Strange that the first emperor of that dynasty was actually a kid. That seems a little unusual.
There's no dynamic family. To get into the family history, his father,
Hong Taiji was the son of another talented, almost like a Genghis Khan figure called Nirhachi.
And his son, Hong Taiji, was an incredible military leader in his own right.
But he dies just before all this happens.
And so it's his young son who was officially on the throne, his brother's Dorgon, his widow,
Sunjur's mother, who is also playing a very strong role behind the scenes, often in league with Dorgon.
The family dynamic is quite interesting, but it works.
And how are the Qing different to them?
They're living in the same palace, so they're inhabiting that space.
Do they try and present themselves as pretty Chinese from the off, or are they proud of their differences?
When you look at the documents written in Manchu, it is clear that Mantu see themselves as a distinct people, that their distinctiveness, being different is what their power is.
They look back at the Mongolians and they think, you know, what went wrong was when you all started thinking of yourselves as Chinese, we've got to keep our traditions, we've got to keep our martial vigor, we've got to keep our hair sense.
styles. We're not going to necessarily impose our culture on the Chinese, but we're going to make
sure that we are always Manchu's, or people of the banners, as they would call themselves. The one
thing they did impress upon the Chinese was they made every male get a haircut. And so the idea was
to make sure they always knew who was on Team Ching. They made all Han Chinese males get the Manchu
haircut, which was to shave your heads in the front and braid your hair long, the back, which when many
Westerners started learning about China, they thought was the Chinese hairstyle. This was actually
a hairstyle imposed on them. And for Chinese men, for whom long hair was a sign of masculinity
and virility, this was an enormous humiliation. So the mantis came up with a slogan,
you can keep your hair, but you'll lose your head. Lose your hair, keep your head. And
wasn't the easiest sell. But the thing about having this cue, as it was called, with that long braid,
was you couldn't fake it.
And so as a result, if you had the queue, you were loyal.
If you didn't have it, you were a rebel.
Wow.
Does life in the imperial palace here, for example, in Beijing,
would there have been continuities between the Ming and the Qing?
The forbidden city gets pretty well trashed in the transition,
both from this rebel army that took over initially
and when the Manchus come in.
But they do rebuild it.
They rebuild it more or less the way the Ming dynasty had it
because they do understand, as distinctive as they are,
the importance of being part of this political tradition.
It's one of the things that the Qing emperors do very well.
They've learned.
They know that they have to keep their distinctiveness,
but they also know they have to be part
of this political tradition.
One of the things they did in the Forbidden City
was in the very back halls in the inner court.
There's a palace called Kunning Gong.
And it's in the very back of the Forbidden City.
In Ming times, it had a variety of uses,
but in Qing times, they set up an altar
for their own rituals because the Manchus had their own religion,
which was kind of a shamanistic religion with totems.
In fact, there's no connection as far as we know,
but it wouldn't be completely unfamiliar to Native Americans in the Pacific Northwest.
A lot of animal spirits.
But it was something they didn't want the Chinese to always get wind up
because the Chinese would see this as being somewhat barbaric,
so they would have their rituals in the back of the forbidden city
where they would eat sacraments of semi-cooked pork
and things that they just did.
didn't want the Chinese to be aware of,
and it made the palace quite filthy a lot of the time.
So there were things that they were doing
that were different than the Ming Dynasty would have done them,
for sure.
And they become very good, particularly as we get
to some of the later emperors, like the Kangxi Emperor,
who rules from 1661, they become very good at what we
think of in the modern day as code switching,
which means when they're Chinese officials,
Han Chinese officials, are in the room.
They can be the Confucian emperor.
They can quote Confucian.
they can write the poetry.
In fact, they have to be better at this
than maybe their Ming Dynasty predecessors
because Chinese officials are judgy.
But when the Chinese officials leave the room
and their Mongolian allies
or their Central Asian envoys come in,
well, then they don't talk about poetry.
They don't wear their robes of MEPA.
They wear their furs.
And they talk about, hey, Borgata,
when we're going tiger hunting?
Because I'm the better shot.
Remember that.
On horseback, I'm always the better shot.
Because that's what matters.
If you want to rule Central Asia,
you got to be a con.
If you want to rule China, you have to be an emperor.
The Mongolians knew how to be cons.
The Ming knew how to be emperors.
The Qing emperors at their best knew how to be both.
And that was one of the things that made them so successful,
despite the fact they were a conquest dynasty.
They're presenting two different faces to the world in a way.
Well, there's their public face and their private face and the powers.
They knew how to be what the room needed them to be.
like all skillful rulers and statesmen often do.
And they could do it in many languages.
The Xion Long Emperor could speak Manchu, Chinese.
He was pretty good in Tibetan as well.
And so you had these rulers who were able to interact
with many different people from all over Asia,
sometimes in their own languages.
That's a pretty special skill.
And I think that's one reason why they were so successful.
Life in the palace for the Manchus,
they adapted to palace,
life as best they could, given they were a semi-nomadic people. But they never totally grooved on the
forbidden city. There was always this feeling is that we inherited this enclosed space. They weren't
wild about Beijing. One of the ways they changed the city, where they moved most of the Han Chinese
out of the northern city around the forbidden city to the southern city and moved the Manchus into the
neighborhoods around the forbidden city. So all these different neighborhoods belong to the different
banners of the Qing army. And the Chinese city, south of where Tiananmen Square is, was also where most
of the markets, the brothels, the theaters, and all of the fun went. And so it has effect even on the
cityscape. One of the other reasons they did this, not just because they wanted a certain segregation
for political reasons, but also the Manchus had no experience with smallpox. And smallpox
decimated the earliest generations of the Qing rulers. In fact, that first young emperor,
Schoinger Emperor, who was the young boy who was in 1644 brought down here, died rather young
of smallpox. His son, the Kangxi Emperor, who would go on to become one of the greatest
rulers in Chinese history, was chosen at eight years old to be the heir because he was one of
the only sons to get smallpox and survive. It was lottery, and yet he turned out to be a great
emperor. And so they wanted that kind of segregation for health reasons, too. But the mansion
also knew how to enjoy life in the palace. And one of the things they would
do is first of all they would go on these long rides and they established in the outskirts of
Beijing these gardens for themselves to use the ones that became the summer palaces so they would
go out there they would ride around they would have banquets and feasts and tea parties and all kinds of
games and activities do they loved a good competition of horseback archery which I don't know if you
have ever tried it is really hard I tried to do it once when I was out in inter Mongolia and it was
lucky that neither I nor the horse was shot and they could do it at full gallop.
Some of their banquets was a little bit different than what the Chinese might
have enjoyed. They were very big on game, meat, and of course if you were the
emperor as much as you might like your venison stew, the rules about eating could
really take a lot of the fun out of the table because you would be presented with an
enormous table of all these dishes, but you were only allowed one by.
of any particular dish, lest you reveal a favorite food.
And the idea was once the emperor was finished with his one bite of any particular dish,
the food would then be distributed to the rest of the household,
down the line, down the pecking order of the princes, the concubines,
and down and down it goes. The leftovers would travel.
You can order a full Man-Han, Manchu Han feast in some restaurants in Beijing.
Well, the shadow is definitely lengthening here in Beijing.
I'll tell you what, Marianna DeForge and I have been our feet all day and we're looking forward to a meal in a cozy restaurant
because you will never go anywhere in the world where you will eat better than you do in China.
The cuisine is absolutely out of control.
Last time we were here, I put on a stone in weight.
Every day we went to a different place, ate different food.
We had Peking Duck from Beijing.
We had spicy dandan noodles from Sichuan.
We had what they called Chinese hamburgers.
little flatbreads with shredded meat from Shian.
And today, while we're going to go for another banquet,
we're going to enjoy the dishes that the Qing emperors would have enjoyed
in the Banting Hall at the Forbidden City.
Because the thing about the Qing is that they are reasonably close to us in time,
so we can look back in recipes that have been preserved,
and we can really find out what they ate.
It's obviously very important historical work here, research,
because how people eat, what they eat, when they eat.
Well, that tells us a huge amount about people in their...
customs, their belief systems, trade networks and rituals.
I'm going to be joined by a very special guest at this dinner.
His name is Thomas Dubois, a culinary historian and professor of Chinese at the Beijing
Normal University.
His newest book is China in Seven Banquets, A Flavorful History.
Cheers.
Great to see you, Thomas.
I love to meet you.
Lovely to meet you.
Very excited about this.
I'm extremely excited.
There we go.
And you tested the right way.
So we're just started off by cheersing.
And I don't want to get that bit wrong, because I understand that there's even someone
and protocol around how you do that?
The first thing is that you want to be lower than the glass of the person that you're clinking glasses with.
And I've seen that turn into some real acrobatics.
I have more than once seen it and with people on the floor.
This is quite a special feast, I must say.
And you'll notice that these fried meatballs are not oily.
That's why they serve them on paper like this.
So you can see it's almost like tempura.
Tempura.
Oh, I see.
That they're not leaving an oil stain.
So this is pork with bean flour.
That gives it a really beautiful texture.
While I'm asking you another question,
I'm going to just be eating here
and listening to all your wonderful answers.
It's heaven.
What form do these would have feast taken?
People in the West might be familiar
with different courses,
which are served and then cleared.
Is that something that's recognizable
in 19th century China,
or is it just a different concept?
of serving food?
You would have sort of what you would call a Zhao Pai-Tai, the big, beautiful dish that sits
in the middle of the table, any kind of roasted meat would take that place.
The meal doesn't revolve around that one dish in the way it would in the West.
So the order that the food comes in, this is dictated by custom, it's also dictated by
health, sort of what is going to be digested in what order, so you wouldn't get the very
heavy food at the beginning.
would open up your appetite like what we've got coming in right now.
The cold dishes come in first.
But generally they would all be on the table at the same time.
Did the Qing, when would they have an imperial feast?
So any guest who would come, particularly a foreign guest, but that would also mean guests
from the regions of China and Central Asia, like Tibet, like Mongolia, any guest arriving
would get a state banquet.
And the emperor may or may not be there.
And the rank of the guest would determine the rank of the banquet, anywhere from one, two, three,
or four would determine what is on the menu.
First, the thing to note is that there are two banquets.
There is a Manchu banquet, and there is a Chinese banquet, Mahan Chenxi.
So the Chinese banquet is the one that we're going to be talking about.
That would have a few dozen dishes.
Overwhelmingly, the main ingredient of this banquet was pork.
The flavor came from dried seafood, overwhelmingly.
So I've noticed this feast that you've laid out before us here.
It's not what we might describe as spicy,
which I would have thought would be pretty common in this part of the world.
Are we too far in the north of China, for that to be true?
North China is not a spicy kind of place, not in terms of the cuisine anyway.
The main taste you want to have is a balance of taste.
But if there is one main taste that drives through all of this, it's sien, savory.
So in Japanese, it's called umami, which is how you know it in English.
For a meat-heavy cuisine, that's really the taste that comes out in soy sauce and all of the sauces and all of the meat preparations.
That's the main taste that is driving this banquet.
So if you look at the food we've got on the table, one of the main spices that you would get,
or one of the main flavors you would get in North China
is this sesame paste.
And sesame is particularly in the province just to the south of us.
It's Shandong.
It's one of the main taste that you would have
in sweet and savory dishes.
A lot of the spices that we have
would be things like Star Anis,
which is a main taste of five spice powder.
The Sichuan peppercorn is what we have
in this dish of green beans.
And it's that numbing pepper.
So the ones that are really important to Chinese cuisine that are native to China, star anise, ginger.
Ginger was supposed to be a great favorite of Confucius and sesame additions like chilies, like white pepper.
These come in over the course of hundreds of years, some from Central Asia, some from Southeast Asia,
but that's why you don't see them in all Chinese cuisines, like you do, for example, with soy sauce, or
fermented beans in general.
Where are the banquets taking place
and how far away is the sort of emperor's private dining?
Where the banquets are taking place,
they would often, if you have a lot of guests being invited,
if you're in the city, if you're in Beijing,
you might set up inside the palace walls,
but outside of the buildings,
you might set up a special dining venue
because you might have hundreds of people showing up.
So essentially a very lavish tent.
And the two,
If you're going out of Beijing to entertain guests, say, in the Manchurian homeland,
then you absolutely would be doing this in a tent.
Oh, interesting.
Or you would be doing it partially outside.
There's a long tradition of extremely fancy picnics.
Which is, I suppose, a little bit more in keeping with their step ancestry.
Yes, absolutely.
And a good deal of what would be served, particularly if you go further north, would be
would be very similar to traditional Manchurian, Mongolian, steppe cuisine.
So a lot of lamb.
One thing that would not be on the menu would be beef.
The Qing royal family did not eat beef.
A lot of people in China don't.
The same reason that a lot of the Qing court didn't eat beef
was because of Buddhist reasons mixed with Confucian ethics.
And behind that whole story is the fact that Catholic
help people on the farm.
So this is an animal that helps people.
You should treat it essentially as a family pet
and mourn it when it dies.
In reality, most people would eat the animal when it dies,
but the discourse is still there.
And it did reach all the way to the palace.
So I'm helping myself to a large bit of this cabbage
named after the Qing Emperor.
What's he actually eating day to day?
A lot of the emperors had very simple tastes.
particularly the early emperors.
Remember that a dynasty is usually started by a military figure, by a soldier.
Soldiers tend to have very Spartan habits.
So the first few emperors of any dynasty,
that Ming and Qing were certainly not exceptional.
So one of the examples that I can think of is the Yongcheng emperor,
who was the early 18th century, Qing emperor.
And he was famous for making friends with Buddhist monks,
for eating vegetarian when he could.
just very Spartan from the way he dressed,
from the way he just lived his daily life.
And you think about it, if you're eating this every night,
this is delicious to have tonight.
Do you want to have it tomorrow?
Yes, I do.
I get your point.
It wouldn't be good for me.
When you can, you eat simple.
You prize the fact that you can control what you eat.
This is something that I think people don't appreciate
about the emperors is they weren't sort of Louis-style monarch.
They were, in a sense, they were very much prisoners of custom.
So they didn't have a lot of choice in what they ate.
A lot of what they ate was decided by court dietitians.
Oh, wow.
If you are not in a formal dining, this kind of atmosphere.
It wasn't lavish, every meal lavish for the sake of being lavish.
Can I just ask a quick question?
What on earth was this strip-like rather cartilaginous material here?
That's some part of our duck.
It's a piece of duck.
Yeah, this is the skeleton of our duck that's been cut up and fried.
Okay.
So after you get the duck, you get to decide what happens to the carcass.
And you can make it into a soup.
You can serve them as noodles.
Those are the two main choices.
But the soup is lovely.
It's a white, milky soup, and that's from the marrow in the bones.
So nothing at all goes to waste?
Nothing goes to waste.
And would that be true of these great feasts?
It was absolutely shared out.
The idea of wasting food even in an ostentatious occasion like this is absolute an ethma.
There are records, so historical records, of how these feasts actually worked.
An example would be, not the ones that happened in the palace, but ones that were probably very similar to them,
you would come as a very important person with a giant revenue in tow, maybe dozens of people,
maybe hundreds of people. So when McCartney showed up in 1793,
He brought his own parade with him, of porters, of assistants, and whatnot.
And this is part of the prestige of the visitors.
How many people come in tow?
So one of the big questions you have with these historical banquets, how many people were invited?
Because we know how much food there was, but we don't know how many people were eating.
The main historical record that talks about these banquets would describe them again in rank of one to four,
Manchu or Han, whatever.
Any permutation of these
is going to have at least 20 pounds of pork.
A ridiculous amount of pork.
And that is not a table.
My theory about this
is that this is per person.
And the reason it's per person
is because you were expected to take
the leftovers to your retinue
that came with you in tow.
There are even records from the very early Qing dynasty,
so the emperors that just first sat on the throne,
so the ones who were really sort of connected to society and armies and battles
and weren't cloistered in the palace,
that they would invite their Mongol and Manchu allies
to have these giant feasts,
and these giant feasts were all meat, 100% meat.
Wow.
And there are visitor descriptions
of people taking meat away from the banquet,
taking it home, in whatever they had.
So, you know, people didn't bring Tupperware with them,
but they would take off their wearing these furs.
They would take off their furs
and wrap as much meat as they could inside.
And so the southern observers, you know,
more elite, more cultured people who are viewing these
and who are riding it all downers,
what in the world is happening?
They're wrapping this giant chunk of roast lamb
in a fur coat and taking it home.
So that's the economy of feasting.
You are not feasting for one.
Just imagine General Wu sitting there at a big feasting.
What did I do?
I've let these barbarians in.
Now we're all doing takeout.
Then should we pass the beer over to you guys?
This is becoming only relatively recently becoming common.
You would drink something cold with dinner.
Oh, interesting.
Because it's just considered to be bad for your digestion.
Speaking of alcohol, what role did that play at them at a banquet?
Huge, immense.
It's interesting because alcohol and drinking culture
is one of the earliest things we see in China.
China developed it at about the same time
that ancient Egypt developed it.
But drinking culture in the Confucian texts
and in China revolves around drinking but not getting drunk.
So this is the statement that is always said about Confucius
And if it's good enough for Confucius, it's good enough for anyone.
That's one of the basic rules, is that Confucius liked to drink, so he wasn't a Puritan,
but he never got drunk.
He didn't drink to excess.
And that's the social ideal of drinking in China.
This is how we toast.
Before you do, can I just check that you're not committing some...
Because as the highest status male here, should I be toasting you first?
I should go first.
Local.
In that case, how about it?
Okay, so first how you hold your glass. So if this is a Baidio glass, it would be the same shape, but it would be a lot smaller. You hold it by the bottom like this. The left hand goes under the bottom. So this is again a sign of respect just like how we cling glasses. I would hold it up like this. I would say a few words to welcome our guest. So simply welcome to Beijing. It is extremely nice to meet you. And thank you for letting me be part of this program.
and I would hold it up like this, you would do exactly the same with your left hand on the bottom,
and as the person who offers the toast, I am required to drink the whole thing.
Oh.
Not so much with beer, but with hard alcohol.
And I would say to you, you don't have to drink the whole thing.
Just drink as much as you can just have a sip, but me, as a show of respect, I drain mine.
So, welcome to baiting.
Thank you very much.
And then I would, would I reply? Now is this a good time to reply?
Now is a nice time to reply.
So I will hold my glass by the stem with my right hand. I will place my three fingers, my left hand, underneath the bottom.
Well, say, thank you so much for coming on this episode of the podcast.
I cannot think of a more enjoyable meal that I've ever had, both in terms of the food that's consumed and the conversation that was had.
Thank you so much. Unforgetable.
And then I would respond with Gambé, maybe.
Okay. Gambay.
Gamba.
You listen to Dan Snow's history at this war coming up.
By the late 18th century, the Qing court was part of a booming global trade network.
As Thomas said, receiving visitors from as far as Britain.
The British weren't even allowed inside the forbidden city.
The emperor issued a high-handed edict.
Our celestial empire possesses all things in prolific abundance and lacks no product within its borders.
There is therefore no need to import the manufacturers of outside barrens.
barbarians in exchange for our own produce.
Instead of ships arriving from Europe full of manufacturers,
they arrived laden with silver.
The Chinese would sell European merchants, silk and porcelain and tea, of course,
which would become an obsession in England.
But this would become a problem.
China's trade was one-sided.
By the late 18th century, silver was leaving Britain faster than it could be replaced.
The British desperately looked for other ways.
to pay their bills.
And eventually, the British gaze fell on opium.
This addictive substance was sent to China in enormous volumes
to redress the balance of trade.
It was devastating for the Chinese.
This is Jeremiah again.
The Qing dynasty just have the longest death rattle in history.
It was a bit of a perfect storm.
They get to the 19th century.
The Qing Empire is facing a threat
an existential threat that it really could not have anticipated.
I mean, how do you foresee an industrial revolution in one part of the world and policies in that
part of the world that then see the rest of the planet as potential colonies and markets?
And so you have increasingly aggressive imperial powers, Britain, France, eventually the United
States, Germany, Russia, Japan, all wanting their peace of China.
The people who were in charge in this era, children.
and then regents, often their mother or their great aunt, just could not keep things together.
People will have heard you talk on this podcast about the opium wars, and people might be familiar with the broad term.
But roughly speaking, what happens in those wars?
And importantly, what is their legacy?
What's their effect on China?
Sure.
So beginning in 1840, you actually have a series of wars between different foreign powers and China.
The first ones are wars over the opium trade.
but then you have other wars involving, for example,
the Qing Empire's involvement in Vietnam,
which brings them into a war with the French.
You have the boxer war in which groups from within China
rise up against the foreigners,
and this then causes the foreign powers to send eight different countries
to send armies into China.
And after each of these wars, you have treaties that are signed
that are, in some cases literally,
other cases figuratively signed at the point of a gun,
and these treaties greatly favor the foreign powers.
So they're stripping the sovereignty of the Qing Empire away,
piece by piece, even as the corruption in the court becomes worse and worse.
It's impossible to imagine any state surviving this kind of situation.
I think in a way it is amazing that China still exists,
given how many other states were partitioned, conquered,
and whose histories were radically changed by this period of European imperialism.
In the early 20th century, there were reformed,
and revolutionaries who would use the term to be Poland did,
where they would refer to the erasure of Poland
from the map of Europe with the idea
that this could very well happen to China.
It could be carved up like a melon.
They knew it was happening with the scramble for Africa.
They knew what was happening in the rest of the world,
and they had no reason to believe that they would not be next.
And one of the things that would inspire some of these revolutionaries
that would ultimately topple the Qing
was this belief that they might be the last generation
of Chinese civilization.
If we don't do something, that's it.
Five thousand years will be the ones to turn off the lights.
So we better act and we better act soon
and we better act radically.
So of all the wonderful things you've told me
about Chinese history, and I don't want to be too derivative here,
but the Qing, you've got corruption at court, poor leadership,
succession of emperors, out of touch.
You've got groups within China rising up for all sorts of reasons,
and you've got a massive external threat.
Now that in the past has spelt the end of a dynasty.
Is that what we see at the end of the Qing?
Right. And I think what happens to is that people will pick and choose the real cause based upon where they're standing.
So many historians outside of China have said, well, you know, the Qing government fell because of all the corruption and the mismanagement.
So the foreign imperialism, that was a problem.
But it was really kind of a surface issue.
It was the rot from within.
It would not have stood in any case.
And of course the Chinese would say, well, it's only due to the foreign powers coming in.
But of course, like most things in history, it's not that neat.
It's a lot of different factors.
And it's hard to think of any dynasty that faced that kind of threat all at the same
time.
What happened the last few years of the Qing?
We are in early 20th century now.
So in the early 20th century, what you have is a succession of child emperors.
Beginning in 1861, there's a young emperor that comes to the throne, but the real power
is the boy's mother.
When this young emperor conveniently dies before taking the throne on his own, his mother appoints
her nephew, the boy's cousin, to be another boy emperor.
And when this one grows up and starts to get ideas of his own, she locks him in a palace
and then just before she dies to make sure he doesn't do anything she wouldn't like after
she has gone.
Just before she dies, she has him poisoned.
And then as her last act installs yet another child emperor on the throne, and this
This is of course the last emperor, Poo-Yi, the subject of a very famous movie, The Last Emperor.
And so when these rebellions and these revolutions break out in the early 20th century,
who's in charge?
This woman, the Empress Dowager, who controlled the power behind all these children for all
those years, she's gone.
There's a boy emperor on the throne.
There's really no one that could withstand the immense, popular, and elite forces that were arrayed
against it.
And so in 1911, when a relatively...
minor uprising breaks out the city of Wuhan, well, there's no one to stand up against it. And it spreads
because everyone thinks, well, it's no point saving this dynasty. And by February 1912, the court has
negotiated abdication. And not only has the Qing dynasty, which has been ruling China since 1644 gone,
but you could argue 2,000 years going back to the first emperor of Chin or so, of a dynastic
system, that's just blown away.
On the 1st of January 1912, China became a republic.
Nanjing in the South was designated the provisional capital.
You get a weird phase where Puyi, the emperor, is still living in the forbidden city, but is restricted certain parts of it.
Pui Yi was allowed to live in the forbidden city under certain restrictions because he was still a young boy, and he lived there for the next 12 years until 1924.
But by that point, China had changed political.
It had been divided up.
It'd become a failed state with warlords competing over everything.
And the idea of having a growing emperor rattling around the forbidden city makes too tempting a target.
In 1917, there had been an attempt by a warlord to restore Poo-Yee to power, even though Poo-Yee wasn't involved in it.
He quickly backtracked after they bombed the forbidden city from the air, one of the first aerial bombings in Beijing.
And then in 1924, when another warlord came in, he finally said, listen, you guys got to go.
and they kicked Kui Yi and his family out of the palace once and for all.
The 18-year-old Poo-Yi took refuge at the Japanese embassy
and then settled in the port city of Tianjin to the southeast of Beijing.
And we've got to finish his story because it really is extraordinary.
He was later made emperor of the puppet state of Manchu Co in Manchuria
by the Japanese.
At the end of World War II, following the Japanese,
surrender, he was captured by Soviet forces as he attempted to flee to Japan, he was taken to the
Soviet Union as a prisoner of war. In 1950, they handed him over to the new communist government
in China, who imprisoned him in a re-education camp for nearly a decade. When he was finally
released in 1959, he essentially lived the rest of his life as a commoner in Beijing,
working as a gardener. It's a wild story.
The Forbidden City, meanwhile, was turned into a public institution, and in 1925 the Palace Museum was opened.
This was the first chance ordinary people had to see behind the great walls, into the once mysterious and hidden halls of imperial power that had ruled theirs and their ancestors' lives for centuries.
People flooded into the palace to have a pick.
They never had a chance to really get a sense of what the emperor, he said.
residents would look like. So they would like to see that. So that was a quite a historical moment.
Did it make people think this is ridiculous what were even thinking here? Or did it make them
almost nostalgic for that scale and grandeur and order of the empire? Do you have any sense?
The most popular thinking in people's mind in early 1920s, that was right after the revolution,
was perhaps that, you know, what corrupted life, you know, this Manchu imperial family had lived
because one very popular slogan proposed by Dr. Sen during the revolution was
Chichu Da Lu, Heufu-Zunha, Da Lu, referring to the Manchu barbarians.
Oh, interesting. Yeah. Kick out the Manchu barbarians. Let's restore the Chinese
civilization. So that was a popular slogan in
2010, 1911, 1912.
When I'm walking around the Forbidden City, the Imperial Palace, I'm so aware that you
could only be in Beijing, you could only be in China, so special, because
so many cities now, so many places are so homogenous, there's coffee shops, there's steel,
there's glass and concrete.
Burner today, the importance of preserving that heritage and how
special it is to have something so unique.
I think that Chinese people, of course, appreciate that we had such an important piece of built heritage, preserved and managed so well today.
That's why getting into the Fubbidden City, getting into the Palace Museum was on the priority list of almost all tourists.
And that's also why getting a ticket was so difficult in the past 10 years.
That shows two things.
One is that people's interest in culture are becoming greater.
For the first half of the Chinese reform era after 1978, people's main focus, almost everybody was on developing our economy.
But for the past 20 years, two decades, I think this shift was very obvious that people from over.
works of life started to focus on going back to the tradition, to understand the root of our culture.
The Imperial Palace of the Forbidden City was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1987,
recognised, obviously, for its astonishing cultural and historical importance.
But as of the summer of 2024, the whole central axis of Beijing is a world heritage site.
It's not hard to see why.
On this chilly November evening, that low sun is now flashing off the curved roofs of the towers that surround me.
I'm standing between the bell tower and the drum tower now on the central axis.
It's a pedestrianised area, so it's a bit like a square really, a village square, except I'm right in the heart of one of the world's busiest cities.
There's some concession stands, lots of families out enjoying the last of the sunlight.
Kids have just been picked up from school by the looks for it by their grandparents.
There's a few people playing hockey on rollerblades.
We've got a man dancing with long scarlet silks.
I could only now be in Beijing.
I couldn't be anywhere else in the world.
And in a country where so much has changed so rapidly,
you feel when you're standing here like you're transported
to the imperial age of China.
You call me nostalgia, but it does feel so much more harmonious
with the natural landscape,
more so than the skyscrapers that surround the rest of the city
and every other city in the world today.
And that is why I'm such a massive believer
in preserving these monuments, these heritage spaces.
They're spaces that tell the story of civilizations through the ages.
They remind us that we have customs and traditions
that make us different from each other
and make each one of those traditions special.
And just judging by the people around me,
they're places where we want to congregate,
we want to flock to.
We find them stimulating and comforting and enriching.
it's one of my favourite things to do, as you all know, take you along to these extraordinary places to have the adventures there
and learn more about how our world was made from the most historic sites, from the places where history happened.
If you've enjoyed this episode, please leave us a review so that other people can find it and enjoy it too.
I'll be making a few other podcasts while I'm here in Beijing over the coming weeks.
You can hear me talking about the rise and fall of the Ming Dynasty.
We're going to go into that in a lot more detail.
We're only discarded over the period in this episode.
And if you want more on the central axis of Beijing,
please check out our film on our video subscription service.
Our History Hit TV channel.
The link is in the show notes to sign up.
I highly recommend it.
Thanks to listen to everyone.
Bye-bye.
