Located 15 km northwest from the centraI city and occupying an area of about 300 hectares, the
Summer Palace Is associated with the Qing
dynasty's dowager empress Cixi, but has a history of
more than 800 years as an imperial garden dating
back to the 1150s.
The name in Chinese, Yiheyuan, means "garden of
restful peace." It served as a suburban pleasance for
emperors, a place in the countryside yet near the
capital.

The Yiheyuan in its present form dates from Manchu
rule over China. 1644-1911. In the 1750s the
emperor Qianlong commanded the creation of the
lake and redesigned the temple atop Longevity Hill.
Severely damaged during the punitive Anglo-French
expedition of 1860 the Empress Dowager ordered its
restoration in the 1880s.It became a public park in
1924.

The function of corridors in Chinese garden architecture
is to offer a sheltered passageway from direct sun as
well as inclement weather when passing between
buildings. The corridor in the Summer Palace. over 700
meters long, is interspersed with a quartet of double-eave octagonal pavilions symbolizing each of the four seasons.
The horizontal support beams inside the corridor are
painted with scenes from West Lake in Hangzhou. as well
as figures from fables and history, Landscapes and
flowers.

The 150 meter long 17 Arch Bridge was built in 1750 by
the Qing emperor Qianlong. Linking the eastern edge of
Kunming lake with the Dragon King Temple on Nanhu (or
Penglai ) islet, the rationale behind the span having 17
arches has to do with Chinese numerology. The number
eight is a homonym for luck or wealth in Mandarin.

Chinese. The ninth arch, the largest, is considered the
number most auspicious for emperors, thus the Son of
Heaven is symbolically positioned in the middle of good
fortune on both sides. The span is partially patterned
after the famed Marco Polo Bridge in southwest Beijing.
There are 544 stone
lions
on the railings.
The infamous Marble Boat was completed in 1893 using
money that had been earmarked for the creation of a
modern Chinese Navy in 1886. The order to divert funds
was quietly issued by the notorious Empress Dowager
Cixi in collusion with corrupt court eunuchs. The marble
base of the boat was originally a platform for a Ming
dynasty Buddhist monastery where fish and birds
intended for the marketplace were released by the
devout in order to gain karmic merit. The ship itself is a
reproduction of a steam paddleboat. In 1903 Cixi had the
wooden top storey added along with colored glass and
mirrors positioned to give the illusion of floating on the
water.