Latest News:  

English>>Life & Culture

Biggest opera theater of Qing imperial family restored to former glory (4)

By  Zhang Zixuan  (China Daily)

08:31, May 22, 2013

Costumes and props of Peking Opera are displayed in the newly renovated theater. (Zhang Zixuan / China Daily)

AT A GLANCE

• The Garden of Virtuous Harmony was constructed from 1891 to 1895 upon the ruins of the Hall of Cheerful Spring (Yi Chun Tang), which Emperor Qianlong (1711-99) built for his mother in 1749 and was destroyed by fire in 1844.

• It cost 710,000 taels of silver (about 26 tons) to build the entertainment site for Empress Dowager Cixi.

• Every time Cixi visited the Summer Palace, she watched operas at the grand theater in the garden, from the second day of her arrival. Every year she spent about 40 days in the garden. She even performed in person when she was in a good mood. Cixi watched operas there for the last time 35 days before her death.

• In the 1950s the garden had its first repair. In 1984 the second repair converted some buildings into exhibition spaces.


【1】 【2】 【3】 【4】



We recommend:

Audi Fashion Festival opens in Singapore

Dare to ride terrifying roller coasters?

Dancers perform 'Mirror and Music' in Taipei

Foggy Xin'an River in Jiande, E China

A taste of Russia at Harbin's Volga Manor

Zhang Ziyi poses at Cannes Film Festival

Those weird people in McDonald

Celebrating 'mother of Chinese opera'

Top 10 Hurun best-selling Chinese artists

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:YeXin、Chen Lidan)

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. New-type guided missile frigate

  2. Fighters in actual-combat training

  3. Tornadoes hit U.S. state of Oklahoma

  4. Reality of migrant workers' sexual needs

  5. China’s weekly story (2013.5.11-5.17)

  6. Explosion kills 13 in China's Shandong

  7. Creative house made of paper boxes

  8. THR's International Artist of the Year

  9. 12 Asian business women

  10. Surplus workers in rural areas will be 'zero'

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. Preserving culture hurts
  2. Chinese premier's India trip to evince Beijing's unwavering pursuit of better ties
  3. AP probe embodies tension between US govt, media
  4. Protectionism no painkiller for Europe
  5. Culture key to sustainable development
  6. Ten white papers, road to human rights protection
  7. Teen's tragedy reveals child abuse problems
  8. People with depression show disrupted brain 'clock'
  9. iPad obsession hurting child's development
  10. Positive signs in Europe hard won

What’s happening in China

University doors open for its security guards

  1. Feathers fly as H7N9 hits China's down industry
  2. Coaches collide in NE China, casualties unknown
  3. 5.8-magnitude earthquake hits Taiwan
  4. HK bans imports of Catalonian poultry products
  5. Smuggled snakes, tortoises confiscated in S China