
The Tian'anmen

The Gate of Heavenly Peace is the front entrance into the Imperial City

A close-up of the rooftop
The 'Tiananmen' or 'Tian'anmen' (;
Manchu: Abkai elhe obure duka), is the main entrance to the
Imperial City, the central part of
Beijing,
People's Republic of China. Although commonly referred to as the front entrance to the
Forbidden City, that honour properly rests with
Meridian Gate. The Tian'anmen is located along the northern edge of
Tian'anmen Square.
History
The gate was originally named Chengtianmen (), or "Gate of Accepting
Heavenly Mandate". The gate was damaged by
lightning in
1457, and was not repaired until
1465. It suffered another blow in the war at the end of
Ming Dynasty - in
1644 the gate was burnt down by rebels led by
Li Zicheng. Following the establishment of the
Qing Dynasty and the
Manchu conquest of China proper, the gate was rebuilt and was given its present name in
1651.
It has been recently revealed by
Xinhua News Agency that the
Chinese government had reconstructed the Tian'anmen gatehouse in 1969-1970. The gate as it stood was by then 500 years old, and had badly deteriorated, partly due to heavy usage in the 1950s-60s. As the gate was a national symbol, then-Premier
Zhou Enlai ordered that the rebuilding was to be kept secret. The whole gate was covered in scaffolding, and the project was officially called a "renovation". The rebuilding utilised traditional techniques and material, and all details were designed to be identical to the original gate.
[1]
Tiananmen Square has been the site of a number of political events such as the proclamation of the
People's Republic of China by
Mao Zedong in
October 1,
1949 and for mass rallies during the
Cultural Revolution. It has also been the site of a number of protest movements, most notably the
May Fourth Movement of
1919 for
science and
democracy,
protests in 1976 after the death of
Zhou Enlai, and the
Tiananmen Square protests of 1989.
The protests of 1989 resulted in the killing of Chinese protestors in the vicinity of the square. The number of deaths continues to be debated. For more details, see
Tiananmen Square protests of 1989 - Number of deaths.
Meaning of name
The
Chinese name of the gate, Tiān'ānmén 天安門, is made up of the Chinese characters for "heaven," "peace" and "gate" respectively, which why the name is conventionally translated as "The Gate of Heavenly Peace". However, this translation is somewhat misleading, since the Chinese name is derived from the much longer phrase "receiving the mandate from heaven, and stabilizing the dynasty." (受命于天,安邦治國).
[2] The
Manchu name of the gate, ''Abkai elhe obure duka'', lies closer to the original meaning of the gate and can be literally translated as the "Gate of Heavenly Peacemaking."
[3] The gate has a counterpart in the northern end of the imperial city, Dì'ānmén 地安门 (Manchu: ''Na i elhe obure duka''), which may be roughly translated as the "Gate of Earthly Peacemaking".
Description

A distant view of the Tian'anmen
Like other official buildings of the empire, the gate has unique
imperial roof decorations. It has the highest number of figures on the roof ridges - ten in each set.
In front of the gate are two
lions standing in front of the gate and two more guarding the bridges. In Chinese culture, lions are believed to protect humans from evil spirits.
Two stone columns, called ''huabiăo'' (华表) - each with an animal (''hou'') on top of it - also stand in front of the gate. Originally, these installations were designed for commoners to address their grievances by writing or sticking up petitions on the columns. However, the examples in front of the Imperial City were purely decorative and instead connoted the majesty of the imperial government.

One of the last publicly displayed portraits of Mao Zedong at the Tian'anmen gate.
Because of the gate's position at the front of the Imperial City, and historical events that have taken place on
Tian'anmen Square, the gate has great political significance. In the 20th Century this means the gate has frequently been decorated with portraits of objects of veneration. In the early years of the People's Republic, on special occasions the gate was hung with portraits of
Sun Yat-sen,
Mao Zedong,
Marx,
Engels,
Lenin, and
Stalin, with pride of place reserved for
Sun Yat-sen.

Cyclists heading to the office in front of the Forbidden City
Since the death of Mao in 1976, the central gate has had a portrait of
Mao Zedong towering over it, while the western and eastern walls have had giant placards; the left one reads "Long Live the People's Republic of China" (中华人民共和国万岁), while the right one reads "Long live the Great Unity of the World's Peoples" (世界人民大团结万岁). The right placard used to read "Long Live the Central People's Government" (中央人民政府万岁), and both placards are written in
simplified Chinese instead of
traditional Chinese characters. The phrasing has significant symbolic meaning, as the
phrase used for ''long live'', like the palace itself, was traditionally reserved for
Emperors of China, but is now available to the common people.
The reviewing stands in the foreground are used on International Workers Day (
May Day) and on the
National Day (
October 1) of the People's Republic of China.
In front of the stands is the palace
moat, still filled with water but now containing decorative illuminated fountains.
In ancient times, the Tian'anmen is the third gate encountered when entering
Beijing. After the
Qianmen, the
Gate of China, stands the Tian'anmen. Proceeding further inward, the next gate is the 'Upright Gate' (), identical in design to the Tian'anmen; behind it is the southern entrance of the
Forbidden City itself, known as the
Meridian Gate.
The Tian'anmen is featured on the
emblem of the People's Republic of China.
Footnotes
1. Xinhua News Agency, Secret reconstruction of Tiananmen 35 years ago, 04/21/05
2. Lu Bingjie, ''Tian'anmen'' (Jinan: Shandong huabao chubanshe, 2004) p. 40.
3. Cf. Erich Hauer. "Why the Sinologue Should Study Manchu." ''Journal of the North-China Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society'' 61 (1930): 156-64.
External links
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Photos of Tian'anmen