Why is China called the Forbidden City?

Time Of Info By TOI Desk Report   January 3, 2025   Update on : January 3, 2025

Forbidden City, Forbidden City tickets
Photo: Freepik

The Forbidden City, situated in the centre of Beijing, once served as the imperial palace for 24 emperors during the Ming and Qing Dynasties. The city was first built over 14 years during the reign of Emperor Chengzu in the Ming Dynasty.

The city is also known as the Palace Museum and Gu Gong in Chinese.

The Chinese term “Forbidden City” emerged as the place gained its name from its enormous scale and severely restricted access to all but the Emperor, the Imperial family, and Eunuchs.

The punishment for unauthorised entry to the Palace Museum was immediate implementation.

The city was the Chinese imperial palace from the early-Ming dynasty in 1420 to the end of the Qing dynasty in 1912in Puyi until 1924 since then it has been a museum.

What are the facts about the Forbidden City?

As one of China’s largest and most well-preserved heritage sites, the Forbidden City is considered one of the world’s topmost important palaces of all time. Here are the top facts relevant to tourists like the world’s largest imperial palace, European and Arabic style buildings, without trees of the majestic Outer Court, home to 24 Chinese emperors, a masterpiece of Chinese architecture, the world’s largest cultural museums; birds cannot land on the roofs, the city’s colours based on fengshui, 40% of still forbidden access, the floor tiles of ‘gold bricks’, special guards – cats, part of the museum’s former collection in Taiwan, fire protection crucial, China attraction with most international tourists, not complete without a visit to Jingshan Park and local experts needed for visit.

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