Chang'an ( ) is an ancient
capital of more than ten
dynasties in
Chinese history. Chang'an literally means
"Perpetual Peace" in
Classical
Chinese. During the short-lived
Xin
Dynasty, the city was renamed "Constant Peace" ( ); yet after
its fall in the year 23 AD, the old name was restored.
By the time of the
Ming
Dynasty
, the name was again changed to Xi'an
,
meaning "Western Peace", which has remained its name to the present
day.
Chang'an had been settled since the
Neolithic times, during which the
Yangshao Culture established in
Banpo in the city's suburb.
Also in the northern
vicinity of the modern Xi'an, the tumulus
ruler Qin Shi Huang of Qin Dynasty held his imperial court, and
constructed his massive mausoleum guarded by the famed Terracotta Army
.
From its
capital at Xianyang
, the Qin
dynasty ruled a larger area than either of the preceding
dynasties. The imperial city of Chang'an during the
Han Dynasty was located in northwest of today's
Xi'an. During the
Tang Dynasty, the
area to be known as Chang'an included the area inside the Ming
Xi'an fortification, plus some small areas to its east and west,
and a major part of its southern suburbs. The Tang Chang'an hence,
was 8 times the size of the Ming Xi'an, which was reconstructed
upon the premise of the former imperial quarter of the
Sui and Tang city. During its heyday, Chang'an
was one of the largest and most populous
cities
in the world. Around 750 A.D. Chang'an was called a "million
people's city" in Chinese records, while modern estimates put it at
around 800,000–1,000,000 within city walls. According to the census
in the year 742 recorded in the
New
Book of Tang, 362,921 families with 1,960,188 persons were
counted in Jingzhao Fu (京兆府), the
metropolitan area including small cities
in the vicinity.
Han period
The site
of the Han capital was located 3 km northwest of modern
Xi'an
. As the capital of the Western Han, it was
the political, economic and cultural center of China. It was also
the eastern terminus of the
Silk Road, and
a cosmopolitan metropolis comparable with the greatest cities of
the contemporaneous
Roman Empire. It
was a consumer city, a city whose existence was not primarily
predicated upon
manufacturing and
trade, but rather boasted such a large
population because of its role as the political and militaristic
center of China. By 2 CE the population was 246,200 in 80,000
households. This population was mostly scholar gentry whose
education was being sponsored by their wealthy aristocratic
families. In addition to these civil servants was a larger
underclass to serve to them.
Initially,
Emperor Liu Bang, decided to build his
capital at the center of the world, which, according to Chinese
geography, was in modern Luoyang
.
This
location was site of the holy city Chengzhou
, home of the last Zhou emporers. The magical
signifigence of this location would assure a long dynasty like the
Zhou whom the Han sought to emulate; however, the practical
strategic military value of a capital located in the Wei Valley
became the deciding factor for locating the new capital. To this
end it is recorded c 200 BCE he forcibly relocated
thousands of clans in the military aristocracy to this region. The
purpose was twofold. First, it kept all potential rivals close to
the new Emperor, and it allowed him to redirect their energy toward
defending the capital from invasion by the nearby
Xiongnu. His adviser Liu Jing described this plan as
weakening the root while strengthening the branch.After having set
up the necessary political structure the area of the capital was
divided into three prefectures, and construction began. At its
founding in 195 BCE the population of Changan was 146,000.
During the regin of Emperor Hui,
Emperor Wu of Han a diplomat,
Zhang Qian journeyed west into
Central Asia. Since then, Chang'an city became
the Asian gateway to
Europe as the point of
departure of the famous
Silk Road.
After the
Western Han period, the Eastern Han government settled in Luoyang
as the new
capital. In 190 CE during late Eastern Han, the
court was seized and relocated back to Changan by the notorious
Prime Minister Dong Zhuo, as it was a
strategically superior site against the mounting insurgency formed
against him, although after Dong's death the capital was moved back
to Luoyang (and later to Xuchang
). By
this time, many dynasties came to regard Changan as the symbolic
site of supreme power and governance.
City wall
The 25.7 km long city was initially city wall was initially
3.5 m wide at the base tapering upward 8 m for a top
width of 2 m. Beyond this wall a 6.13 m wide moat with a
depth of 4.62 m was spanned by 13.86 m long stone
bridges. The wall was later expanded to 12–16 m at base and
12 m high. The moat was expanded to 8 m wide and 3 m
deep. The expansion of the wall was likely a solution to flooding
from the Wei River. The entire city was sited below the 400 m
contour line which the Tang Dynasty
used to mark the edge of the floodplain.
Twelve gates with three gateways each per the ritual formulas of
Zhou dynasty urban
planning pierced the wall. These gates were distributed three
per a side and from them eight 45 m wide main avenues extended
into the city. These avenues were also divided into three lanes
aligned with the three gateways of each gate. The lanes were
separated by median strips planted with Pine, Elm, and Scholar
trees. Bachengmen Avenue was an exception with a width of 82 m
and no medians. Four of the gates opened directly into the
palaces.
City structure
The overall form of the city was an irregular rectangle.
The ideal
square of the city had been twisted into the form of the Big Dipper for astrological reasons, and also to
follow the bank of the Wei
River
. The eight avenues divided the city into
nine districts. These nine main districts were subdivided into 160
walled 1×1
li wards. About 50-100 families lived in
each ward. Historically, Changan grew in four phases: the first
from 200-195 BCE when the palaces were built; the
second195-180 BCE when the outer city walls were built; the
third between 141-87 BCE with peak at 100 BCE; and the
fourth from 1 BCE-24 CE when it was destroyed.
The Xuanpingmen gate was the main gate between the city and
suburbs. The district north of the Weiyang Palace was the most
exclusive. The main market, called the Nine Markets, was the
eastern economic terminus of the Silk Road. Access to the market
was from the Northeast and Northwest gates, which were the most
heavily used by the common people. The former connect with a bridge
over the Wei River to the northern suburbs and the latter connected
with the rest of China to the east.
First Phase
In
200 BCE after marking the boundaries of the three prefectures,
which comprised the metropolitan region of Xianyang
, Liu Bang appointed Xiao He
to design and build the new capital. He chose to site the
city on ruins of the
Qin Dynasty Xingle
Palace (興樂宮). It was greatly expanded to 7×7
li in size
and renamed
Changle Palace (長樂宮). Two
years later, a new palace called
Weiyang
Palace (未央宮) was constructed 5×7
li. Prime minister
Xiao He convinced Liu Bang that both the
excessive size and multiplicity of palaces was necessary to secure
his rule by creating a spectacle of power.
Second Phase
In 195 BC, his son,
Emperor Hui of
Han began the construction of the walls of Chang'an and
finished them in September of 191 BC. The grid north of the palaces
was built at this time with a 2° difference in alignment to the
grid of the palaces. The city remained quite static after this
expansion.
Third Phase
Wang Mang began a third phase of construction which peaked on
100 BCE with the construction of many new palaces. He also
added the nine temples complex south of the city, and built the
park. In 120 BCE Shanglin Park which had been used for
agriculture by the common people since Liu Bang was sealed off and
turned into an imperial park again. In the center of the park was a
recreation of the
three fairy
islands in Kunming Lake.
Palaces
- Changle Palace Also called the East Palace.
After Liu Bang it was used as the residence of the Empress Regent.
The 10,000 m wall surrounded a square 6 km2
complex. Important halls of the palace included: Linhua Hall,
Changxin Hall, Changqiu Hall, Yongshou Hall, Shenxian Hall,
Yongchang Hall, and the Bell Room.
- Weiyang Palace, Also known as the West Palace.
The official center of government from Emperor Huidi onwards. The
palace was a walled rectangle 2250×2150 m enclosing a
5 km2 building complex of 40 halls. There were four
gates in the wall facing a cardinal direction. The east gate was
used only by nobility and the north one only by commoners. The
palace was sited along the highest portion of the ridgeline on which Changan was built. In, fact the
Front Hall at the center fo the palace was built atop the exact
highest point of the ridge. The foundation terrace of this massive
building is 350×200×15 m. Other important halls are: Xuanshi
Hall, Wenshi Hall, Qingliang Hall, Qilin Hall, Jinhua Hall, and
Chengming Hall. Used by seven dynasties this palace has become the
most famous in Chinese history.
- Gui Palace Built as an extension of the harem
built in 100 BCE
- Bei Palace A ceremonial center built in
100 BCE
- Mingguan Palace Built as a guesthouse in
100 BCE
- Jinazhang Palace Built in 104 BCE in
Shanglin Park. It was a rectangle 20×30 li with a tower
46 m high. The name means palace of establishing eternal
rules.
Sui and Tang periods
Both Sui and Tang empires occupied the same location. In 582,
Emperor Wen of
Sui Dynasty sited a new region southeast of the
much ruined Han Dynasty Chang'an to build his new capital, which he
called Daxing (Great Prosperity). Daxing was renamed Chang'an in
year 618 when the Duke of Tang, Li Yuan, proclaimed himself the
Emperor Gaozu of Tang empire.
Chang'an
in the Tang Dynasty (618—907) was,
along with Constantinople
(Istanbul
) and Baghdad
, one of the largest cities in the world. It
was a cosmopolitan urban center with considerable foreign
populations from other parts of Asia and beyond. This new Chang'an
was laid out on a north-south axis in a grid pattern, dividing the
enclosure into 108
ward
and featuring two large
marketplaces, in
the east and west respectively. Chang'an's layout influenced city
planning of several other Asian capitals for many years to come.
Chang'an's walled and gated wards were much larger than
conventional city blocks seen in modern cities, as the smallest
ward had a surface area of 68
acres and the
largest ward had a surface area of . The height of the walls
enclosing each ward were on average 9 to in height.
The Japanese built
their ancient capitals, Heijokyo
(today's Nara) and later
Heian-kyo
or Kyoto, modelled after
Chang'an in a more modest scale yet was never fortified. The
modern Kyoto still retains some characteristics of Sui-Tang
Chang'an.
Similarly, the Korean Silla dynasty modeled their capital of Gyeongju
after the Chinese capital. Sanggyeong, one
of the five capitals of the state of
Balhae,
was also laid out like Chang'an. Unfortunately, much of Chang'an
was ruthlessly destroyed during the fall of the Tang empire and in
the subsequent centuries. It never recovered, but there are still
some monuments from the Tang era that are still standing.
Layout of the city
During Tang, the main exterior walls of Chang'an rose high, were by
six miles in length, and formed a city in a rectangular shape, with
an inner surface area of 30 squared miles. The areas to the north
that jutted out like appendages from the main wall were the West
Park, the smaller East Park, and the Daming Palace, while the
southeasternmost extremity of the main wall was built around the
Serpentine River Park that jutted out as well. The West Park walled
off and connected to the West Palace (guarded behind the main
exterior wall) by three gates in the north, the walled off
enclosure of the Daming Palace connected by three gates in the
northeast, the walled off East Park led in by one gate in the
northeast, and the Serpentine River Park in the southeast was
simply walled off by the main exterior wall, and open without gated
enclosures facing the southeasternmost city blocks. There was a
Forbidden Park to the northwest outside of the city, where there
was a
cherry orchard,
pear grove, a
vineyard, and fields for playing popular sports
such as horse
polo and
cuju (ancient Chinese
football). On the northwest section of the main
outer wall there were three gates leading out to the Forbidden
Park, three gates along the western section of the main outer wall,
three gates along the southern section of the main outer wall, and
three gates along the eastern section of the main outer wall.
Although the city had many different
streets
and
roads passing between the wards, city
blocks, and buildings, there were distinct major roads (lined up
with the nine gates of the western, southern, and eastern walls of
the city) that were much wider avenues than the others. There were
six of these major roads that divided the city into 9 distinct
gridded sectors (
listed
below by
cardinal direction).
The narrowest of these streets were wide, those terminating at the
gates of the outer walls being wide, and the largest of all, the
Imperial Way that stretched from the central southern gate all the
way to the Administrative City and West Palace in the north, was a
whopping wide. Streets and roads of these widths allowed for
efficient fire breaks in the city of Chang'an. For example, in the
year 843, a large fire consumed 4,000 homes,
warehouses, and other buildings in the East
Market, yet the rest of the city was at a safe distance from the
blaze (which was largely
quarantined in
East Central Chang'an). The citizens of Chang'an were also pleased
with the government once the imperial court ordered the planting of
fruit trees along all of the avenues of
the city in the year 740.
Pools, streams, and canals
Within the West Park there was a running
stream, and within the walled enclosure of the West
Palace there were two running streams, one connecting three
ponds and another connecting two
ponds. The small East Park had a pond the size of those
in the West Palace. The Daming Palace and the Xingqing Palace
(located along the eastern wall of the city) both had a small
lake to boast, yet the Serpentine River Park
had a large lake within its bounds that was bigger than the latter
two lakes combined, connected at the southern end by a river that
ran under the main walls and out of the city. There were 5
transport and sanitation
canals running
throughout the city, which had several different water sources, and
delivered water to city parks, gardens of the rich, and the grounds
of the imperial palaces. The sources of water came from a stream
running through the Forbidden Park and under the northern city
wall, two different running streams from outside the city in the
south, a stream that fed into the pond of the walled East Park,
which in turn fed into a canal that led to the inner city. These
canal waterways in turn streamed water into the ponds of the West
Palace while the lake in the Xingqing Palace connected two
different canals running through the city. The canals were also
used to transport crucial goods throughout the city, such as
charcoal and fire wood in the winter.
Locations and events during the Tang Dynasty
Southwestern Chang'an
Locations and events in the southwest sector of the city
included:
South Central Chang'an
Locations and events in the south central sector of the
city included:
- 20 walled and gated wards
- 3 Buddhist monasteries
- 7 Daoist abbeys
- 11 Family shrines
- 1 Inn
- An event in the year 815 where assassins murdered Chancellor Wu as he was
leaving the eastern gate of the northeasternmost ward in south
central Chang'an; the event took place just before dawn.
- An event in the year 849 where an imperial prince was impeached
from his position by officials at court for erecting a building
that obstructed a street in the northwesternmost ward in south
central Chang'an.
- The infamous rebel An Lushan's
garden
- A garden with a pavilion
where graduate students of the
Advanced Scholar's Exam could
hold 'peony parties'.
- A walled ward with an empty field; in the 7th century it was
originally a place where slaves, horses, cattle, and donkeys could be sold, but the entire ward was
eventually transformed into a military
training ground for crossbowmen to
practice.
- A special garden that provided food for the imperial crown prince's household.
- A government garden that supplied pear-blossom honey, amongst other natural goods.
Southeastern Chang'an
Locations and events in the southeast sector of the city
included:
- 13 walled and gated wards
- 9 Buddhist monasteries
- 3 Daoist abbeys
- 5 Family shrines
- 2 Inns
- 1 Graveyard
- The Serpentine River Park, which had one of the Buddhist
monasteries and one of the family shrines of the southeastern
sector of the city within its grounds.
- A medicinal garden for the heir apparent was located in a northern walled
ward of this southeast sector of the city. A pastry shop stood by the north gate of the same ward,
along with the site of an ancient shrine where citizens came every
third day of the third moon and ninth day of the ninth month.
- A ward to the north of this southeast city sector had half of
its area designated as a graveyard.
- A purportedly haunted house
- A
large monastery with ten courtyards and
1897 bays; this monastery was
home to the Giant Wild Goose Pagoda
(built in 652), which still stands today at a
height of 64 m tall. Graduate students of the Advanced
Scholars Exam would come here to this monastery in order to
inscribe their names. This same city ward also had a large bathhouse, an entertainment plaza, an additional monastery which had its own pond,
and a mansion that had its own bathhouse.
- A ward with another garden pavilion for graduate students to
hold their 'peony parties'.
- An inn that was attached to the rapid relay post office.
- An apricot grove where graduate students
could celebrate their success with feast.
West Central Chang'an
Locations and events in the west central sector of the city
included:
- 11 walled and gated wards (including the large marketplace
ward)
- 22 Buddhist monasteries
- 2 Daoist abbeys
- 2 Family shrines
- 3 Large water ponds
- The West Market (西市); its surface area covered the size of two
regular city wards, and was divided into 9 different city blocks. It sported a Persian bazaar that
catered to tastes and styles popular then in medieval Iran
. It
had numerous wineshops, taverns, and vendors of
beverages (tea being the
most popular), gruel, pastries, and cooked cereals. There was a safety deposit firm located here as well,
along with government offices in the central city block that
monitored commercial actions.
- The offices for Chang'an County, the
western half of the city.
- The mansion of a Turkic prince.
- The main office of Chang'an City's mayor.
- A bureau for managing the households of princes.
- An event in the year 613 where a family threw their gold into
the well of their mansion because they
feared the city government would confiscate it.
- A firm that rented hearses and other
equipment for funerals, along with hiring
exorcists.
- An event in the year 813 where a sow in a pig sty gave birth to
a deformed piglet that had one head, three ears, two connected
bodies, and eight different legs.
- An event every day where the West Market (and East Market)
would open at noon, announced by the 300 strikes on a loud drum,
while the markets would close one hour and three quarters before
dusk, the curfew signaled by the sound of 300 beats to a loud gong.
After the official markets were closed for the night, small night
markets in residential areas would then thrive with plenty of
customers, despite government efforts in the year 841 to shut them
down.
Central Chang'an
Locations and events in the central sector of the city
included:
- 16 walled and gated wards
- 17 Buddhist monasteries
- 6 Daoist abbeys
- 1 Official temple
- 3 Family shrines
- 3 Locations for Provincial Transmission Offices
- 3 Inns
- 2 Graveyards
- A court for imperial
musicians
- A minister's mansion that had a 'pavilion of automatic rain',
that is, air conditioning by the
old Han Dynasty invention of technician Ding Huan's (fl. 180 AD)
rotary fan.
- An event where a scholar was once injured on the head here by a
cuju football, and out of pity for his plight, the emperor gave him
a personal gift of twenty-five pints of
drinking ale.
- An event in the year 720 where the walls of one ward partially
collapsed during a heavy storm.
- A mansion belonging to Princess
Taiping (died 713).
- An event where a dwarf lady magician was said to provide the illusion of changing herself into a bamboo stalk
and a skull.
- The main Capital Schools, which were the Sons of State Academy,
the Grand Learning Academy, and Four Gates Academy.
- An assortment of other colleges for law,
mathematics, and calligraphy.
- A ward that had the largest number of entertainment plazas in
the city.
- A mansion home that was valued at 3 million Tang-era copper
coins in the 9th century.
- Another mansion that had a pavilion of plastered walls covered
with an aromatic herb
from Central Asia
- The Small Wild Goose
Pagoda, which still stands today.
- A shop that sold fancy pastry
- The Pavilion of Buddha's Tooth, located in a monastery where
graduate students of the Advanced Scholars Exam could enjoy their
'cherry feasts' in honor of their academic
success.
- A government-run mint for casting
copper-coin currency
- A small field for playing horse polo
East Central Chang'an
Locations and events in the east central sector of the city
included:
- 11 walled and gated wards
- 11 Buddhist monasteries
- 7 Daoist abbeys
- 1 Family shrine
- 1 Foreign place of worship (church, synagogue, mosque,
etc.)
- 4 Locations for Provincial Transmission Offices
- 3 Inns
- 1 Graveyard
- 1 Large water pond
- The East Market (東市); like the West Market, this walled and
gated marketplace had nine city blocks and a central block reserved
for government offices that regulated trade and monitored the
transactions of goods and services. There was a street with the
name "Ironmongers' Lane", plenty of pastry shops,
taverns, and a seller of foreign musical instruments.
- The North Hamlet (the Gay
Quarters); the homosexual
community of Chang'an was concentrated here in a ward to the
northwesternmost area of the city sector. Homosexuality in China
was often called 'pleasures of the bitten peach', the 'cut sleeve',
or the 'southern custom'. Along with the concentration of
Chang'an's gay community here, the North Hamlet was also heavily
concentrated with many of the city's entertaining courtesans, as well as its notorious brothel houses for prostitution. Aside from the prostitutes, the
Chinese courtesans were more or less similar to the Japanese
geisha, and unlike the bar and tavern maids
they had excellent table manners, polite mode of speech and
behavior, and were reserved for entertaining the elite of
society.
- The Offices of Wannian County, the eastern half of the
city
- The main office of the City Archives
- The government bureau of the Directorate for Astronomy
- An event in 775 where an Uyghur
Turk stabbed a man to death in broad daylight in the East Market
before being arrested in the marketplace shortly after. However,
his Uyghur chieftan named Chixin (赤心) or Red Heart broke into the
county prison and freed the murderous
culprit, wounding several wardens in
the process.
- A mansion of a princess with a large
polo playing field in the backyard
- An event where Emperor
Gaozong of Tang (r. 649-683) once held the wedding feast here for the marriage ceremony of his daughter Princess Taiping.
- The beer brewery of
Toad Tumulus Ale.
- An event in the year 788 where a gang of four thieves killed their arresting officer and fled the
city.
- An event where the assassins of Chancellor Wu hid in the bamboo
groves of a mansion in this sector of the city after the
murder.
- A Buddhist monastery with an entertainment plaza
- A home of a 'face reader' (physiognomist) where daily flocks of people
came to have their fortunes told.
- A mansion bestowed by the emperor to An
Lushan (who became the most infamous rebel during the Tang era)
in 750 that was converted into a Buddhist abbey after his demise.
There was also a garden in a separate ward designated for An
Lushan.
- A mansion of a high-ranking general in the mid 8th century that
was recorded to have 3000 inhabitants of the extended family living
on the premises.
- A Zoroastrian church of worship from
Iran
- An event where the imperial court demoted an official because
it was discovered that he had assembled a large number of female
entertainers here in a dwelling that was not his home.
- An event in the 9th century where three maidservants committed suicide by leaping into a
well and drowning once they heard the rebel Huang Chao was ransacking
their mistress's mansion.
Northwestern Chang'an
Locations and events in the northwest sector of the city
included:
- 12 walled and gated city wards
- 27 Buddhist monasteries
- 10 Daoist abbeys
- 1 Official Temple
- 1 Family shrine
- 6 Foreign places of worship (Church, synagogue, mosque,
etc.)
- 1 Inn
- 1 Graveyard
- The military barracks for the Divine
Strategy Army.
- A shrine for Laozi's father
- Three Zoroastrian churches of worship
- Three Persian Nestorian-Christian churches of worship
- The office of the Inexhaustible Treasury
- An event in the year 828 where a eunuch commanded fifty
wrestlers to arrest 300 commoners over a
land dispute, whereupon a riot broke out in the
streets.
- The home of An Jinzang, who cut his belly open with a knife in
order to defend Emperor Ruizong
of Tang against charges of treason.
- A mansion of Princess Anle
- The Inexhaustible Treasury; in the year 713, Emperor Xuanzong liquidated the
highly lucrative Inexhaustible Treasury, which was run by a
prominent Buddhist monastery in Chang'an. This monastery collected
vast amounts of money, silk, and treasures through multitudes of
synonymous rich people's repentances, leaving the donations on the
premises without providing their name. Although the monastery was
generous in donations, Emperor Xuanzong issued a decree abolishing
their treasury on grounds that their banking practices were
fraudulent, collected their riches, and distributed the wealth to
various other Buddhist monasteries, Daoist abbeys, and to repair
statues, halls, and bridges in the city.
North Central Chang'an
Locations and events in the north central sector of the
city included:
- Large gated walls connected to the West Palace and the main
outer walls of the city
- 24 walled and gated wards
- 14 Different armed guard units in
6 different wards
- The August Enceintes; this large walled compound of 24 wards
was the Administrative City, where the various offices and main
bureaus of the central government were located (in front of the
southern walls of the lavish West Palace).
- The headquarters for the Service for Supreme Justice (Supreme court).
- The Imperial factories
- An event in the year 713 where a large carnival was held along the main avenue lined
against the southern wall of the West Palace
- The Imperial stables and hay fields for horses
- The government halls for civil and military examinations
- The Imperial ancestral shrine
Northeastern Chang'an
Locations and events in the northeast sector of the city
included:
- 14 walled and gated wards
- 13 Buddhist monasteries
- 4 Daoist abbeys
- 1 Family shrine
- 3 Locations for Provincial Transmission Offices
- 1 Inn
- The Xingqing Palace; once a Buddhist monastery, it was
converted to an Imperial palace in the early 8th century. Within
the walled and gated grounds there was a large lake, two streams,
an aloeswood pavilion, and an archery
hall.
- A large carriage park where officials
visiting the Daming Palace could safely leave their horse-drawn
vehicles for the day.
- An entertainment ward in this sector that was considered to
have the finest singers in the city, and
another with the finest dancers.
- An event where Empress Wu once donated
one of her dressing rooms to a
monastery here
- An event where a eunuch who converted his mansion into a
monastery held a feast where he demanded each guest to celebrate by
striking the cloister's bell and donating
100,000 strings of cash.
- An event in the year 730 where Emperor Xuanzong of Tang had four
palace halls dismantled and reassembled as halls and gates for a
Daoist abbey, the grounds of which was formally a large garden for
the Bureau of Agriculture.
- A residence for princes in the ward forming the northeast
corner of the city
- An event in the year 835 where palace troops captured rebel
leaders in a tea shop that were planning a palace coup de tat against the chief court
eunuchs.
- An event in the early 9th century where the emperor spent 2
million strings of cash to purchase the former mansion of a
venerated minister so that the dwelling could be returned to the
minister's pious grandson.
- A mansion of Princess Tongchang that had a water well lined
with a railing made of pure gold and silver.
- A court for imperial musicians
- A large playing ground as a horse polo field
- An event in 756 where the occupying rebel An Lushan ordered Sun Xiaozhe to have
eighty three princesses, their husbands, and parties of Yang Guozhong and Gao
Lishi murdered at Zongren Fang in reprisal for his already
executed son An Qingzong.
- A workshop for a maker of musical instruments
- An event where a renowned but drunken artist painted an entire
mural in one night at the north gate of a Buddhist monastery in the
southwesternmost ward of this city sector.
- A spot in the south central ward of this city sector where
girls often played cuju football under a tree beside the road.
- A street where the emperor would organize public entertainments
to celebrate his birthday
The West Palace

The bronze
jingyun bell cast
in the year 711 AD, measuring 247 cm high and weighing 6,500 kg,
now located at the Xi'an Bell Tower.
The West Palace to the north included:
- An archery hall
- Polo grounds
- Elaborate Gardens
- Five large water ponds and three different streams
- A cuju football field
- A drum tower
- A bell tower
- The residence of the Crown Prince, dubbed the 'East
Palace'
- The Flank Court, where women were incarcerated for the crimes of their husbands
and other menfolk of the family they remained loyal to.
- The school for palace ladies
- The Seat of the Eunuch Agency
The West Park
The West Park grounds included:
- A river stream
- Three gates leading into the West Palace
- Ice pits for refrigerating foods during the spring and
summer
The Daming Palace
The Daming Palace grounds included:
- Double walled gates at the north end leading out of the city,
and one walled gate at the south end leading into the city
- A large lake
- An archery hall
- A bathhouse
- A storehouse for musical instruments
- A drum tower
- A bell tower
- A cuju football field
- A cockfighting arena
- Academy of music for the
actors and performers in the Pear Garden Troupe
- A separate entertainment ward
The East Park
The East Park grounds included:
- A large pond
- Two streams (one leading into the park from under the wall, one
feeding water into a city canal)
- A cuju football field
Tallies
For different buildings and locations in the entire city,
the total numbers for each were:
- 111 Buddhist monasteries
- 41 Daoist abbeys
- 38 Family shrines
- 2 Official temples
- 10 City wards having one or multiple Provincial Transmission
Offices
- 12 Inns
- 6 Graveyards
- 7 Official foreign-religion churches
Citywide events
Citywide events of Chang'an include:
- Festivals of traditional Chinese holidays
celebrated throughout the city (and empire) included:
- New Years; the grandest of all
festivals, and a seven-day holiday period for government officials.
Civil officials, military officers, and foreign emissaries gathered
first in the early hours of the morning to attend a levee, an occasion where omens, disasters, and
blessings of the previous year would be reviewed, along with
tribute of regional prefectures and foreign countries presented. It
was also an opportunity for provincial governors to present their
recommended candidates for the imperial examination. Although festival
ceremonies in Chang'an were lavish, rural people in the countryside
celebrated privately at home with their families in age old
traditions, such as drinking a special wine, Killing Ghosts and
Reviving Souls wine, that was believed to cure illnesses in the
following year.
- Lantern Festival; a three-day
festival held on the 14th, 15th, and 16th days of the first
full moon. This was the only holiday where
the government lifted its nightly curfew all across the city so
that people could freely exit their wards and stroll about the main
city streets to celebrate. Citizens attempted to outdo one another
each year in the amount of lamps and the size of lamps they could
erect in a grand display. By far the most prominent was the one in
the year 713 erected at a gate in Chang'an by the
recently-abdicated Emperor
Ruizong of Tang. His lantern wheel had a recorded height of ,
the frame of which was draped in brocades
and silk gauze, adorned
with gold and jade jewelry,
and when it had its total of some 50,000 oil cups lit the radiance
of it could be seen for miles.
- Lustration; this one day festival
took place on the third day of the third moon (dubbed the
"double-three"), and traditionally was meant to dispel evil and
wash away defilement in a river with scented aromatic orchis plants. By the Tang era it had become a time
of baudy celebration, feasting, wine drinking, and writing poetry.
The Tang court annually served up a special batch of deep fried pastries as desert for the occasion,
most likely served in the Serpentine River Park.
- Cold Food Festival; this
solar-based holiday on April 5 (concurrent with the Qingming Festival) was named so because no
fires were allowed to be lit for three days, hence no warmed or hot
food. It was a time to respect one's ancestors by maintaining their
tombs and offering sacrifices, while a picnic
would be held later in the day. It was also a time for fun in
outdoor activities, with amusement on swing
sets, playing cuju football, horse polo, and tug of war. In the year 710, Emperor Zhongzong of Tang had his
chief ministers, sons-in-law, and military officers engage in a
game of tug of war, and purportedly laughed when the oldest
ministers fell over. The imperial throne also presented porridge to
officials, and even dyed chicken and duck eggs, similar to the
practice on Easter in the Western world.
- Fifth Day of the Fifth Moon; this one-day holiday dubbed the
Dragon Boat Festival was held
in honor of an ancient Chinese statesman Qu
Yuan (c. 340 BC-278 BC) from the State
of Chu. Ashamed that he could not save the dire affairs of his
state or his king by offering good council, Qu Yuan leaped into a
river and committed suicide; it was said
that soon after many went out on the river in boats in a desperate
attempt to rescue him if still alive. This act turned into a
festive tradition of boarding a dragon
boat to race against other oarsmen, and also
to call out Qu's name, still in search of him. The type of food
commonly eaten during the Tang period for this festival was either
glutinous millet or rice wrapped in leaves and boiled.
- Seventh Night of the Seventh Moon; this was a one-day festival
that was held in honor of the celestial
love affair with deities associated with the
star Altair (the male cow-herd deity) in the
constellation Aquila and the star Vega (the female weaver maid deity) in the
constellation Lyra. For this holiday, women
prayed for the enhancement of their skills at sewing and weaving.
In the early 8th century Tang servitors had erected a tall hall by
knotting brocades to a bamboo frame and laid
out fruits, ale, and roasts as offerings to the two stellar lovers.
It was during this holiday that the emperor's concubines threaded polychrome thread into needles with nine eyes,
while facing the moon themselves (in a ritual called "praying for
skill [in sewing and weaving]").
- Fifteenth Day of the Seventh Moon; this holiday was called All
Saints' Feast, developing from the legend of the bodhisattva savior Mulian who had discovered his
mother paying for her sinful ways while in purgatory filled with hungry ghosts. According to
the tale, she starved there because any food that she put into her
mouth would turn into charcoal. Then it was said that she told the
Buddha to make an offering with his clergy on the fifteenth day of
the seventh month, a virtuous act that would free seven generations
of people from being hungry ghosts in Hell as well as people reborn
as lower animals. After Mulian was able to save his own mother by
offerings, Mulian convinced the Buddha to make the day into a
permanent holiday. This holiday was an opportunity of Buddhist
monasteries to flaunt their collected wealth and attract donors,
especially by methods of drawing crowds with dramatic spectacles
and performances.
- Fifteenth Day of the Eighth Moon; this festival (today simply
called the Moon Festival or Mid-Autumn Festival), took place in mid
autumn, and was designated as a three day vacation for government officials. Unlike the
previous holiday's association with Buddhism, this holiday was
associated with Taoism, specifically Taoist alchemy. There was a tale about a hare on the moon who worked hard grinding ingredients for an elixir
by using a mortar and pestle. In
folklore, a magician escorted Emperor Illustrious
August to the palace of the moon goddess across a silver bridge
that was conjured up by him tossing his staff into the air. In the
tale, on the fifteenth day of the eighth moon, the emperor viewed
the performance of "Air of the Rainbow Robe and Feathered Skirt" by
immortal maids. He memorized the music, and on his return to earth
taught it to his performers. For people in Chang'an (and
elsewhere), this holiday was a means for many to simply feast and
drink for the night.
- Ninth Day of the Ninth Moon; this was a three-day holiday
associated with the promotion of longevity (with chrysanthemum as the main symbol). It was a
holiday where many sought to have picnics out in the country,
especially in higher elevated areas such as mountain sides. Without
the ability to travel away to far off mountains, inhabitants of
Chang'an simply held their feasts at the tops of pagodas or in the
Serpentine River Park. Stems and leaves of chrysanthemum were added
to ferment grains and were
brewed for a year straight. On the same festival the following
year, it was believed that drinking this ale would prolong one's
life.
- The Last Day of the Twelfth Moon; on this holiday ale and fruit
were provided as offerings to the god of the stove, after having
Buddhist or Taoist priests recite scripture at one's own home (if
one had the wealth and means). Offerings were made to the stove god
because it was his responsibility to make annual reports to heaven
on the good deeds or sins committed by the family in question. A
family would do everything to charm the god, including hanging a
newly painted portrait of the god on a piece of paper above their
stove on New Years, which hung in the same position for an entire
year. It was a common practice to rub in some alcoholic beverage across the picture of
the deities mouth, so that he would become drunk and far too
inebriated to make any sort of reasonably
bad or negative report about the family to heaven.
- Grand Carnivals; carnivals during the
Tang period were lively events, with tons of eating, drinking,
street parades, and sideshow acts in tents.
Carnivals had no fixed dates or customs, but were merely
celebrations bestowed by the emperor in the case of his generosity
or special circumstances such as great military victories, abundant
harvests after a long drought or famine,
sacrifices to gods, or the granting of grand amnesties. This type of carnival as a nationwide
tradition was established long before the Tang by Qin Shihuang in the 3rd century BC, upon his
unification of China in 221. Between the years 628 and 758, the
imperial throne bestowed a total of sixty nine different carnivals,
seventeen of which were held under Empress
Wu. These carnivals generally lasted 3 days, and sometimes
five, seven, or nine days (using odd numbers due so that the number
of days could correspond with beliefs in the cosmos). The carnival
grounds were usually staged in the wide avenues of the city, and
smaller parties in attendance in the open plazas of Buddhist
monasteries. However, in the year 713, a carnival was held in the
large avenue running east to west between the West Palace walls and
the government compounds of the administrative city, an open space
that was long and wide, and was more secure since the guard units
of the city were placed nearby and could handle crowd control of
trouble arose. Carnivals of the Tang Dynasty featured large passing
wagons with high poles were acrobats would climb and perform stunts
for crowds. Large floats during the Tang, on great four-wheeled
wagons, rose as high as five stories, called 'mountain carts' or
'drought boats'. These superstructure vehicles were draped in
silken flags and cloths, with bamboo and other wooden type frames,
foreign musicians dressed in rich fabrics sitting on the top
playing music, and the whole cart drawn by oxen
that were covered in tiger skins and outfitted
to look like rhinoceroses and elephants. An official in charge of the music
bureau in the early seventh century set to the task of composing
the official music that was to be played in the grand carnival of
the year. On some occasions the emperor granted prizes to those
carnival performers he deemed to outshine the rest with their
talents.
- In the year 682, a culmination of major droughts, floods, locust plagues, and epidemics, a widespread famine broke out in the dual Chinese capital cities
of Chang'an and Luoyang. The scarcity of food drove the price of
grain to unprecedented heights of inflation, while a once prosperous era under
emperors Taizong and Gaozong ended on a sad note.
See also
Notes
- (a) Tertius Chandler, Four Thousand Years of Urban Growth:
An Historical Census, Lewiston, NY: The Edwin Mellen Press,
1987. ISBN 0-88946-207-0. (b) George Modelski, World Cities: –3000 to
2000, Washington DC: FAROS 2000, 2003. ISBN
0-9676230-1-4.
- New Book of Tang, vol. 41 (Zhi vol. 27) Geography
1.
- Schinz, 1996
- Schinz, 1996
- Schinz, 1996
- Ministry of Culture, P.R.Chin (2003)
- Schinz, 1996
- Ministry of Culture, P.R.Chin (2003)
- Schinz, 1996
- Schinz, 1996
- Schinz, 1996
- Schinz, 1996
- Benn, 50.
- Ebrey, 92.
- Benn, 47.
- Benn, xiv.
- Benn, xiii.
- Benn, 48.
- Benn, 49.
- Benn, xviii
- Benn, xix
- Benn, 62.
- Benn, xv
- Benn, xvi.
- Benn, xvii.
- Benn, 54.
- Benn, 55.
- Needham, Volume 4, Part 2, 33, 233.
- Benn, 67.
- Benn, 64.
- Benn, 149.
- Benn, 150.
- Benn, 151.
- Benn, 152.
- Benn, 153.
- Benn, 154.
- Benn, 155.
- Benn, 156.
- Benn, 157.
- Benn, 4.
References
- Benn, Charles (2002). China's Golden Age: Everyday Life in
the Tang Dynasty. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN
0-19-517665-0.
- Ebrey, Walthall, Palais (2006). East Asia: A Cultural,
Social, and Political History. Boston: Houghton Mifflin
Company. ISBN 0-618-13384-4.
- Needham, Joseph (1986). Science and Civilization in China:
Volume 4, Physics and Physical Technology, Part 2, Mechanical
Engineering. Taipei: Caves Books Ltd.
- Ma, Dezhi. "Sui Daxing Tang Chang’an Cheng Yizhi"
("Archeological Site of Sui's Daxing and Tang's Chang'an".
Encyclopedia of China
(Archeology Edition), 1st ed.
- Wang, Chongshu. "Han Chang’an Cheng Yizhi" ("Archeological Site of
Han's Chang'an"). Encyclopedia of China (Archeology
Edition), 1st ed.
Further reading
- Cotterell, Arthur (2007). "The Imperial Capitals of China - An
Inside View of the Celestial Empire." Pimlico. ISBN
9781845950095. 304 pages.
- Schafer, Edward H. “The Last Years of Ch’ang’an”. Oriens
Extremus X (1963):133-179.
- Sirén, O. “Tch’angngan au temps des Souei et des T’ang”.
Revue des Arts Asiatiques 4 (1927):46-104.
- Steinhardt, Nancy Shatzman (1999). Chinese Imperial City
Planning. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press.
- Xiong, Victor Cunrui (2000). Sui-Tang Chang’an: A Study in
the Urban History of Medieval China. Ann Arbor: University of
Michigan Center for Chinese Studies.
External links