GALLERY OF FALLEN WONDERS  · FRAME 6 OF 8

The Old Summer Palace

Yuanmingyuan 圓明園, the Garden of Perfect Brightness

The Garden of Perfect Brightness, dark since 1860.

The Old Summer Palace
颐园新居, Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)  · source
EXISTED
1707 – 1860
WHERE
Beijing, China
LOST
18–21 October 1860
CAUSE OF LOSS
Looted and burned by British and French troops

Northwest of Beijing, the Qing emperors spent a century and a half building Yuanmingyuan, the Garden of Perfect Brightness, eight hundred acres of lakes, hills, pavilions, libraries and European-style marble palaces, holding perhaps the finest collection of art and treasure ever assembled in China. Visiting Jesuits called it the garden of gardens; there was nothing like it anywhere in the world.

In October 1860, at the close of the Second Opium War, British and French troops looted the palace and then, on the order of Lord Elgin, as punishment for the torture and killing of envoys, burned it. Thousands of men set fires that took three days to consume what could not be carried away. China has left the ruins unrestored: a wound kept deliberately open.

THE LAST

Set alight on 18 October 1860; the fires burned for three days. A few marble arches of the European palaces still stand in the grass, kept as ruins on purpose.

SOURCES
MMXXVI · IN MEMORIAM RERUM AMISSARUM