How about the Ming Tombs

Good scenic spot

The Ming Tombs are located at the foot of Tianshou Mountain. The total area is more than 12 square kilometers. It's about fifty kilometers from Beijing. The Ming Tombs are located in a small basin surrounded by mountains in the east, west and north, surrounded by mountains, with a plain in the middle. There are winding rivers in front of the tombs, with beautiful mountains and beautiful scenery. Thirteen imperial tombs are built on the hills, respectively on the foothills of the east, west and north, forming a mausoleum complex with complete system, grand scale and magnificent momentum. Warlocks in the Ming Dynasty believed that it was a "geomantic" scenic spot and an excellent "auspicious soil". Therefore, it was chosen by the Ming Dynasty as the "longevity domain" for the construction of the imperial tomb. The cemetery was built in 149 ~ 1644, with a history of 3 ~ 5 years. Covering an area of 4 square kilometers, the mausoleum area is the largest existing imperial mausoleum complex in China and even the world. In the Ming Dynasty, on the way to the north of sha he, there was a seven-hole stone "Chaozong Bridge". In the town east, there is a magnificent "Gonghua City". The city used to be a palace where Emperor Jiajing rested during the mausoleum sacrifice, and now only the ruins are left.

The Ming Tombs are the general name of the royal tombs of 13 emperors after the Ming Dynasty moved their capital to Beijing. There are Changling Mausoleum (Chengzu), Xianling Mausoleum (Injong), Jingling Mausoleum (Xuanzong), Yuling Mausoleum (Yingzong), Maoling Mausoleum (Xianzong), Tailing Mausoleum (Xiaozong), Kangling Mausoleum (Wuzong) and Yongling Mausoleum (Sejong) in turn. The scenic spots that have been opened include Changling, Dingling, Zhaoling and Shenlu.

The Ming Tombs are one of the best preserved imperial tombs in China. After the founding of the People's Republic of China, in order to protect this cultural relic, the government began to carry out maintenance from the early days of liberation and protected the Ming Tombs as a national key cultural relic. The Ming Tombs (13 pieces) In 1957, the Beijing Municipal Government announced the Ming Tombs as the first batch of key ancient cultural relics protection units in Beijing. In 1961, the Ming Tombs were announced as national key cultural relics protection units. In 1982, the State Council announced Badaling-Ming Tombs Scenic Area as one of the 44 key scenic spots in China. In 1991, the Ming Tombs were identified by the National Tourism Administration as one of the "Forty Best Tourist Attractions in China". In 1992, the Ming Tombs were rated as "the most well-preserved tombs with the largest number of buried emperors in the world" by the most selection committee of Beijing Tourism World.