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Beijing Liao and Jin City Wall Museum

Coordinates: 39°51′41″N 116°21′9.5″E / 39.86139°N 116.352639°E / 39.86139; 116.352639
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Liao and Jin City Wall Museum
The Liao and Jin Dynasty City Wall Museum
Map
Established1995
LocationBeijing
Coordinates39°51′41″N 116°21′9.5″E / 39.86139°N 116.352639°E / 39.86139; 116.352639
TypeHistorical site, History museum
Public transit accessPublic Bus

The Beijing Liao and Jin Dynasty City Wall Museum (Chinese: 北京辽金城垣博物馆) is a museum built over the ruins of Beijing's Liao and Jin dynasty (1115–1234) city wall. The museum is located at No.41 Yulinli, Yulin South Road, in Fengtai District of southwestern Beijing, near the north bank of the Liangshui River.[1]

History

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During the 12th century, the city of Beijing was centered to the southwest of the present day metropolis in southern Xicheng District (formerly Xuanwu District) and Fengtai District. The city known as Zhongdu was the capital of the Jin Dynasty. In 1990, the remnants of a water gate in the city wall of Zhongdu was discovered at the site.[1][2] The museum built over the water gate opened in 1995.[1]

Display

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The museum's display space of 2,500 square meter is primarily underground.[1] The remnants of the water gate, a wood and stone structure, is 43.4 m in length with a tunnel that is 21 m long and 7.7 m wide.[1] The museum also showcases Liao and Jin era artifacts unearthed in and around Beijing.[1]

Access

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Admission to the museum is free.[3]

Transport

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The nearest metro station is Jingfengmen station on Lines 14 and 19 of Beijing Subway, 500 m to the east.

The nearest bus stops are Youanmenwai, 500 m to the east (Bus No. 19, 48, 72, 88, 377, 454, 474) and Daguanyuan (Grand View Garden) 800 m to the north (Bus No. 53, 59, 63, 84, 122, 458, 474, 717, 939, 特3, 特12, 运通102).

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b c d e f (Chinese) "北京辽金城垣博物馆" Archived December 4, 2012, at the Wayback Machine Accessed 2012-01-09
  2. ^ Beijing Liao and Jin City Wall Museum
  3. ^ (Chinese) "北京免费参观博物馆之一:辽金城垣博物馆" Archived June 16, 2010, at the Wayback Machine Accessed 2012-01-09