Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - How to draw the Forbidden City tour route map is simple and easy to draw

How to draw the Forbidden City tour route map is simple and easy to draw

How to draw the Forbidden City tour route map is simple and easy to draw as follows:

1. Use a ruler to draw straight lines and first draw the general outline of the Forbidden City.

2. Draw the walls around the Forbidden City.

3. Go inside and find out the various branches of the Forbidden City.

4. Then mark all the names of each branch hall.

Summary:

First use a ruler to draw the general outline of the Forbidden City, which requires a general understanding of the Forbidden City. Then draw the walls of the Forbidden City as well. Then according to the actual situation, draw each branch hall in the Forbidden City. Then mark the names of each branch hall and you are done.

Introduction to the Palace Museum:

The Palace Museum was established on October 10, 1925. It is a large-scale comprehensive ancient art museum based on the imperial palaces of the Ming and Qing Dynasties and their collections. The Forbidden City was listed in the first batch of "National Key Cultural Relics Protection Units" by the State Council in 1961, and was included in the "World Heritage List" by UNESCO in 1987. The Palace Museum was rated as a national 5A tourist attraction in 2007 and among the first batch of national first-class museums in 2008.

The Palace Museum covers an area of ??more than 1 million square meters and preserves about 9,000 ancient buildings. It is the largest and most well-preserved ancient palace complex in my country. The predecessor of the Forbidden City was the Forbidden City, the imperial palace of the Ming and Qing Dynasties. It was built in the 18th year of Yongle in the Ming Dynasty (1420). 24 emperors from the Ming and Qing dynasties lived here. After Puyi abdicated in 1912, the history of the Forbidden City as an imperial palace ended.

In 1914, the Antiquities Exhibition Hall was established in the outer court area; in 1925, the Palace Museum was established in the inner court area; in 1948, the Antiquities Exhibition Hall was merged into the Palace Museum. The Palace Museum has a complete system of cultural relics collection, with a total collection of more than 1.86 million pieces (sets). According to different textures and forms, they can be divided into 25 categories such as paintings, Dharma calligraphy, inscriptions, bronzes, gold and silverware, among which precious Cultural relics account for 90% of the total collection.

The Palace Museum displays the long and splendid history to the public through various means such as royal palace buildings of the Ming and Qing Dynasties, original displays of palace historical sites, permanent exhibitions of art collections such as treasures, clocks, calligraphy and paintings, ceramics, sculptures, and temporary special exhibitions. Chinese civilization.