Our next attraction in Beijing was the Summer Palace.
The Summer Palace 
literally "Gardens of Nurtured Harmony"
After the Great Wall and the Forbidden City, the Summer Palace is often considered to be the next must see place to visit for any tourists in Beijing. 
 Click on the map to enlarge.
The Summer Palace, Yihe yuan in Chinese, is the largest and  best-preserved imperial garden in the world, a veritable museum of  classical Chinese garden architecture. 
In 1998, it was listed as one of the World Heritage Sites by UNCESCO,  and it declared the Summer Palace "a masterpiece of Chinese landscape  garden design". 
The natural landscape of hills and open water is combined with  artificial features such as pavilions, halls, palaces, temples and  bridges to form a harmonious ensemble of outstanding aesthetic value. It  is a popular destination but also serves as a recreational park.
 
Below is an 'birds eye view' representation of the area to help you to get an overview of the palace grounds.
 Click on the picture to enlarge.
Situated in the western outskirts of Haidian District, western edge  of Beijing between the fourth and fifth ring roads, 15 kilometers from  central Beijing, the Summer Palace, constructed in the Jin Dynasty  (1115-1234), was extended continuously in the later time, and had become  a luxurious royal garden providing royal families with rest and  entertainment by the time of the Qing Dynasty. 


 Click on the maps to enlarge.
 
Click on the maps to enlarge.Highlights of the Summer Palace 
- Longevity Hill Area: The hill is about 60 meters  high and houses many buildings positioned in sequence, built in Qing  Dynasty (1644-1911). The front hill is rich in splendid halls and  pavilions; while the back hill, in sharp contrast, is quiet with nature  beauty. 
- Kunming Lake Area: Kunming Lake is the central lake  on the grounds of the Summer Palace, forming the key landscape features  of the gardens, together with the Longevity Hill. It covers  approximately three quarters of the Summer Palace, with an area of 2.2  square kilometers. Since the lake develops a solid ice cover in winter,  it is used for ice skating.
- Long Corridor: The "Long Corridor" is a covered  walkway. 795 yards long that runs by Kunming lake. It is the longest  walkway in any Chinese garden, with over 14,000 traditional Chinese  paintings on the beams and crossbeams. The function of corridors in  Chinese garden architecture is to offer a seltered passageway from  direct sun as well as inclement weather when passing between buildings.
We entered the grounds through a ornately decorated gate... 

 on to a promenade along the east bank of Kunming Lake, north of the 17 Arch Bridge.
 
on to a promenade along the east bank of Kunming Lake, north of the 17 Arch Bridge.  At the boat docks we could see the bridge and the island it connects to through the smoggy haze.
We were supposed to take boats out  on the lake. When we arrived, however, we were told that due to recent drought  conditions that the lake's water levels were too low to allow any boats  to go out. There was a man with his daughter in native dress hoping to make some money posing for photographs.
To the west and north we looked out over the lake and at the Palace in the distance shrouded in the haze.
We strolled north along the willow lined promenade toward the Palace.
We passed through the gate and entered into the palace complex. Our time was very limited and we saw precious little of the Summer Palace. Inside the gate we saw the Hall of Benevolence and Longevity, the building that housed the throne upon which Empress Dowager Cixi sat and received foreign state dignitaries.
Our guide Joan.
It was very busy and crowded as people tried to find just the right spot to snap their photos. The favorite subjects seemed to be the various dragons, lions, birds and Chinese unicorns .. 
 
  
  
 
  If you are interested, here is a little history of the Summer Palace compound. 
The Summer Palace has a history of over 800 years. It started in the early 12th century when the Golden Hill Palace was built in 1153.
If you are interested, here is a little history of the Summer Palace compound. 
The Summer Palace has a history of over 800 years. It started in the early 12th century when the Golden Hill Palace was built in 1153.
 Construction:            Large scale construction of the Summer Palace was taking place during            the reign of Emperor Qianlong  in the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911). At that time,            the Qing Dynasty was in its heyday and China was a powerful Asian country            with vast territories. With supreme power and large sums of money, Emperor            Qianlong summoned skillful and ingenious artisans from all over the            country to carry out this construction work in honor of his mother's            birthday. After 15 years and one seventh of the nation's annual revenue            spent, the Garden of Clear Ripples was completed and served as a testimony            to China's scientific and technological achievements.
Construction:            Large scale construction of the Summer Palace was taking place during            the reign of Emperor Qianlong  in the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911). At that time,            the Qing Dynasty was in its heyday and China was a powerful Asian country            with vast territories. With supreme power and large sums of money, Emperor            Qianlong summoned skillful and ingenious artisans from all over the            country to carry out this construction work in honor of his mother's            birthday. After 15 years and one seventh of the nation's annual revenue            spent, the Garden of Clear Ripples was completed and served as a testimony            to China's scientific and technological achievements.
 
Destruction: The Summer Palace has fallen prey to two acts of  destruction. The first took place in 1860 when the Anglo-French forces  invaded Beijing and ravaged both the Yuanming            Yuan Garden  (Garden of Perfection and Brightness)  and the Park of  Pure Ripples. Every single building in the park was destroyed by fire  except nonflammable structures such as bronze pavilions and stone  pagodas. 
After big fires set by the foreign invading forces in  1860 and 1900, only some broken stone pillars and collapsed arches of a  group of western-style buildings survived. (see more here) The second great act of destruction took place in  1900 when the Eight-Power Allied Forces invaded Beijing. The great  temples rebuilt in the 1880s were completely demolished and almost every  valuable object in sight stolen by the invading troops. In 1902 
Rebuild: In 1888, Empress Dowager Cixi diverted 30 million  taels of silver originally designated for the Chinese navy into the  reconstruction and enlargement of the Summer Palace. She had the  southern side of Longevity Hill laid out in imitation of West Lake in  Hangzhou and the northern face in the architectural style of Suzhou. She  gave the park its present name: Yiheyuan (Garden of Good Health and  Harmony), known generally in English as the Summer Palace. 
When Empress Dawager Cixi  returned to Beijing from Xi' an, she ordered the reconstruction of the  park. According to historical records, she "rebuilt the Summer Palace  with unbounded extravagance and opulence, spending some 40,000 taels of  silver per day. Singing and dancing went on without end."   Liberate:            After the Revolution of 1911, the Summer Palace  became the private property of the deposed Emperor Puyi, who in 1914  opened the garden to the public. The entrance fee was so high that the  palace had very few visitors. In 1924, Puyi, the last Emperor was driven out of the Forbidden            City by the "Christian" General Feng Yuxiang, the Summer Palace turned from an imperial garden into a public park. The Summer palace once again fell prey to full-scale  devastation; pavilions and covered corridors were destroyed, lakes  became silted up, vegetation withered and died, and antiques and other  objects of value were lost.
Liberate:            After the Revolution of 1911, the Summer Palace  became the private property of the deposed Emperor Puyi, who in 1914  opened the garden to the public. The entrance fee was so high that the  palace had very few visitors. In 1924, Puyi, the last Emperor was driven out of the Forbidden            City by the "Christian" General Feng Yuxiang, the Summer Palace turned from an imperial garden into a public park. The Summer palace once again fell prey to full-scale  devastation; pavilions and covered corridors were destroyed, lakes  became silted up, vegetation withered and died, and antiques and other  objects of value were lost. 
Puyi's story is compelling, from Emperor at the age of 3 to living out his final days as a gardener in Beijing. I highly recommend the 1987 film The Last Emperor. 
Click on the videos below for previews.
   
  
Living through one of the most tumultuous periods of Chinese and  world history, Puyi, the last Emperor of China, was both a participant  in, and victim of, his times. In 1908, aged only two, Puyi ascended the  throne at the Forbidden City in Beijing as Qing Emperor of China. At  six, rebellions forced his abdication but he continued to live at the  palace surrounded by women and eunuchs. At 13 he started to learn of the  wider world from his British teacher Reginald Johnston. Soon afterwords  Puyi was evicted from the Palace and embarked on an amazing personal  quest to recover his throne. He became a puppet Emperor controlled by  the Japanese, a prisoner of the Soviet Union, an inmate of a Communist  Chinese re-education camp and finally an ordinary citizen living in  Beijing through the brutal upheavals of the Cultural Revolution.  Featuring never-before-seen archive footage and photographs, as well as  extracts from his writing and interviews with eyewitness relatives.
Below is the closing scene of a biography, The Last Emperor of China, also very interesting and recommended.
If you would like to see the entire film here are the download links. Download all the links and join them with a program like WinRAR or jZip (click on either name for a free download link).
Present:            Summer Palace of today is more or less the same as the            palace rebuilt in 1903. This old imperial garden now becomes an ideal            place for Beijing locals to retreat from the hot summer in Beijing. 
Below are some earlier examples of various stages of the Summer Palace.
 
 
We saw a few other buildings, plazas and gardens just east of the palace itself and then eventually passed through the East Gate exiting the Summer Palace having just brushed a corner of the complex.
 
Below are a few photos of some of the areas of the Summer Palace that we  missed but are important points of interest.
 
Back in the daily life of today's Beijing we made our way to the bus which would take us back to the hotel and then to the theater to see the Acrobat Show.
Up next: The Acrobat Show