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Looking for the name of the room in the ancient palace

If you are writing a novel, you can make it up yourself. Whatever you write will be whatever you want to call it. The following history is for reference only. I feel it is best to name it yourself. That feels novel~~

Chang'an City in the Western Han Dynasty:

Mingguang Palace, Changle Palace, Weiyang Palace, Guigong, Beigong, Jianzhang Palace

Reference A Complete Selected Volume of Ancient Chinese History published by the People's Education Press - Plan of Chang'an City in the Western Han Dynasty

The palace architecture of the Western Han Dynasty is highlighted by the Changle and Weiyang Palaces. Changle Palace was built during the conflict between Chu and Han. Weiyang Palace was built in the seventh year of Emperor Gaozu (200 BC) and was presided over by Xiao He. Weiyang Palace has the front hall as its main body, and there are east and west chambers for handling government affairs. Changle Palace is dedicated to the residence of the Queen Mother. It is located in the northeast corner of Chang'an City and is connected to Mingguang Palace to the north. The palace city is about 10,000 meters around and contains four groups of palaces: Changxin, Changqiu, Yongning and Yongshou. In the second year of Taichu (103 BC) of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty, Zhang Palace was built in the southwest of Chang'an. It was a palace in the nature of a garden. Among them is the Feng Pavilion, with its ridge decorated with copper tiles, the Jinggan Tower and the Shenming Platform with a dew tray for immortals.

The layout of Chang'an City can be summarized as five main contents, including five palaces, twelve city gates, eight streets and nine roads, nine east and west cities, and one hundred and sixty li.

1. The fifth palace: the aforementioned Changle Palace, Weiyang Palace, Guigong, Beigong, and Mingguang Palace.

Changle Palace is located in the southeast, with the palace wall about 2,000 meters from east to west and 2,400 meters from north to south. Empress Lu once lived here, and later it became the residence of the Empress Dowager. Weiyang Palace is located in the west of Changle Palace and in the southwest corner of the city. It is 2,300 meters long from east to west and about 2,000 meters long from north to south. The emperor lived here and was the place for court meetings and administrative affairs. Guigong is located in the north of Weiyang Palace, 880 meters long from east to west and about 1800 meters long from north to south. The walls of Beigong and Mingguang Palace have not yet been discovered. These three palaces were the residences of the emperor's inner chambers below the queen mother and empress.

Ganquan Palace

Ganquan Palace was the most important place for Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty after the Weiyang Palace in Chang'an. It was not only a summer resort for the ruling class, but also many major political activities were arranged there. Proceed here. Ganquan Mountain is located 25 kilometers north of Chunhua County, out of Ganquan.

The Ming Dynasty's "Miscellaneous Notes on Reading History" quotes "Kuo Di Zhi" as saying: "There is a palace in Ganquan Mountain, Linguang Palace built by Qin Shihuang, which is more than ten miles around. Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty built Linguang Palace in the second year of Yuanfeng. Next to it was the Ganquan Palace."

The Tang Dynasty had a strong national power and the palaces and gardens of Chang'an were magnificent. There is Taiye Pool in the north of Daming Palace. Penglai Mountain stands alone in the pool. There are more than 400 cloisters built around the pool. Xingqing Palace is centered on Longchi and surrounded by many groups of courtyards. Among the three gardens in Ouchi, the West Garden is the most beautiful. There are rockeries, lakes and canals in the garden. There are Furong Garden and Qujiang Pool in the southeast corner of Chang'an City, which are open to the public within a certain period of time. They are actually a kind of public amusement park in ancient times. Among the famous palaces in the Tang Dynasty, the Jiucheng Palace in Tiantai Mountain in Linyou County was a summer palace for summer vacation; the Huaqing Palace at the foot of Lishan Mountain in Lintong County was a winter palace to escape the cold. The ruins of Daming Palace are located on Longshou Plain in the northeast of Xi'an City, Shaanxi Province. In the eighth year of Zhenguan in the Tang Dynasty (634), Taizong Li Shimin built Yong'an Palace in the Forbidden Garden at the northeast corner of Chang'an Palace for his father Li Yuan to escape the summer heat. The following year, it was renamed Daming Palace. In the second year of Longshuo (662), Gaozong Li Zhi expanded it and once changed its name to Penglai Palace. It later became the main place where emperors of the Tang Dynasty lived and listened to politics in Chang'an. At the end of Tang Dynasty, it was destroyed by war. In 1961, its site was designated as a national key cultural relic protection unit. Daming Palace stands high on the Dragon Head Plain, facing Zhongnan Mountain in the distance and overlooking Chang'an City. It is large in scale and majestic. The plan of the palace is irregular rectangular, wide in the south and narrow in the north. The north wall is 1,135 meters long, the south wall (that is, a section of the northern wall of Chang'an City) is 1,674 meters long, the west wall is perpendicular to the north and south walls and is 2,256 meters long, and the east wall is tilted and twisted. There are three parallel east-west palace walls in the palace. All palace walls are rammed earth walls, with bricks laid only on the inner and outer surfaces where they meet the city gates and at the corners of the city walls. The city base is more than 13 meters wide, more than 1 meter deep, and the bottom of the city wall is more than 10 meters wide. In the northern part of the palace city, there is a sandwich city built parallel to the east, north and west walls. The distance between the west and east sides of Jiacheng is 55 meters from the palace city, and the distance between the north and west sides of Jiacheng is 160 meters.

The Danfeng Gate in the middle of the south wall of the palace is the main entrance. There are Yanzheng and Wangxian gates in the east, and Jianfu and Xing'an gates in the west. There is a right Yintai gate in the middle of the west wall, and a Jiuxian gate in the north. There is a left gate in the east wall. Yintai Gate; in the middle of the north wall is the Xuanwu Gate, to the east is the Yinhan Gate, to the west is the Qingxiao Gate, and to the north of the Xuanwu Gate is the Chongxuan Gate. The area around the north gate was where the Bei Ya Imperial Guard was stationed at that time, and was related to the safety of the palace. Therefore, three gates (including the heavy gate within the Xuanwu Gate) were built within a distance of less than 200 meters. The base of the gate still exists. According to records, the Daming Palace is divided into two parts: the outer court and the inner court. The outer dynasty followed the three-dynasty system of Taiji Palace in the Tang Dynasty, and lined up the Hanyuan Hall of the Great Dynasty, the Xuanzheng Hall of the Japanese Dynasty, and the Zichen Hall of the Chang Dynasty along the north-south axis. There are several pavilion terraces built on the east and west sides of the three halls. There are also several official offices attached to the outer court, such as Zhongshu Province, Menxia Province, Hongwen Museum, History Museum, etc. The inner court part is centered on the ether pool. Penglai Mountain is built in the middle of the pool, and curved corridors are arranged around the pool. There are many palaces, halls, pavilions and pavilions around it, and the sleeping hall is in the south of the pool. This is the place where emperors and concubines lived and played. The specific locations of each temple remain to be determined through further archaeological excavations. Hanyuan Hall is the first palace on the central axis of Daming Palace. It is a place where important ceremonies are held. Hanyuan Hall uses the high ground of Longshou Plain as the foundation of the hall. The remaining ruins are more than 10 meters above the southern floor. The east, north and west sides of the hall are rammed earth walls and plastered with white plaster. The hall is 11 rooms wide, each room is more than 5 meters wide and 4 rooms deep. The north wall is 5 meters away from the center of the north inner trough column, and the north-south span of the inner trough column is 9.8 meters. The hall is surrounded by auxiliary steps and corridors. There is a square column base existing on the temple site. The square part below is 1.4 meters long and 0.52 meters high. The upper convex basin is 10 cm high and 84 cm in diameter. From the size of this component alone, we can see the scale of Hanyuan Hall. The Longwei Road in front of the hall is 75 meters long. The flat section of the road is paved with plain square tiles, and the slope is paved with lotus square tiles. On both sides are bluestone hooks with stone pillars and chi heads. There are Xiangluan and Qifeng pavilions in front of the east and west sides of Hanyuan Hall, which are connected to Hanyuan Hall by a curved-foot-shaped verandah. This huge group of palace buildings reflects the majestic style of Tang Dynasty architecture and became an example of palaces in later generations. Linde Hall is a place where the emperor held banquets, watched acrobatic dance music and performed Buddhist rituals. It is located on the high ground directly west of Taiye Lake, 90 meters away from the west wall of the palace city. The platform of the palace ruins is made of rammed earth, surrounded by brick walls. It is rectangular, more than 130 meters long from north to south, and about 77 meters wide from east to west. It has two floors, with halls and verandas built on the upper platform. Linde Hall It consists of the front hall, the middle hall and the back hall. The middle hall is the main hall, 9 rooms wide from east to west (except for one room each on the two gables), and 5 rooms deep from north to south. There are two partition walls in the hall, dividing the hall into east, middle and In the third west part, there are 5 rooms in the middle and 2 rooms on each side. The ground is paved with 0.2-meter-thick stone slabs. The front hall is also 9 rooms wide from east to west. The two mountains are aligned with the middle hall. There are no walls at the front and back. The two rooms at both ends are 4 rooms deep, and the 7 middle rooms are 3 rooms deep. The ground is also paved with stone slabs. The apse and the nave are separated only by a wall. The two mountains are aligned with the two mountains of the nave. They are three rooms deep. The ground is paved with square tiles and the hall is surrounded by a cloister. To the east of the back side of the hall is the Yuyi Building, to the west is the Jielin Building, and in front of the two buildings are the East Pavilion and the West Pavilion. The buildings and pavilions are built on high rammed earth platforms. The buildings, pavilions, corridors and verandas set off the three halls, forming a large-scale architectural combination with the characteristics of the Tang Dynasty.

The architecture of the Forbidden City is divided into two parts: the "outer court" and the "inner court" according to its layout and function. The "outer dynasty" and the "inner court" are bounded by the Qianqing Gate. To the south of the Qianqing Gate is the outer dynasty and to the north is the inner court. The architectural atmospheres of the outer court and the inner court of the Forbidden City are completely different.

The outer dynasty is centered on the three main halls of Taihe, Zhonghe and Baohe. It is the place where the emperor held court meetings and is also called the "former dynasty". It is the place where feudal emperors exercised their power and held grand ceremonies. In addition, there are Wenhua Hall, Wenyuan Pavilion, Shangsiyuan and Nansansuo on the east side of the two wings; there are Wuying Hall, House of Internal Affairs and other buildings on the west side.

The inner court is centered on the three palaces behind Qianqing Palace, Jiaotai Palace, and Kunning Palace. Its two wings are Yangxin Palace, East and West Six Palaces, Zhai Palace, and Yuqing Palace. There is an Imperial Garden at the back. It was the residence of feudal emperors and concubines. The Ningshou Palace in the eastern part of the inner court was built by Emperor Qianlong for his retirement after his abdication. To the west of the inner court are Cining Palace and Shouan Palace. In addition, there are buildings such as Chonghua Palace and North Five Palaces.

The center of the outer dynasty: Taihe Hall, Zhonghe Hall, and Baohe Hall, collectively referred to as the three main halls (called in the Ming Dynasty: Fengtian Hall, Huagai Hall, and Jinshen Hall. During the Jiajing period, they were renamed: Huangji Hall, Zhongji Hall and Jianji Hall.

It is now called the Qing Dynasty name)

The inner court is centered on Qianqing Palace, Jiaotai Palace, and Kunning Palace, with East Sixth Palace and West Sixth Palace on the east and west wings. It is where the emperor handles daily government affairs and where the emperor interacts with others. The place where the concubine lives