The Kyeonghee Palace was one of five palaces built during the Korean dynasty. Unfortunately, the palace was destroyed by fire and later demolished during the Japanese occupation to build a school for Japanese citizens. The current address was rebuilt in the 1990s and a small picture exhibition about the history of the Qingxi Palace was on display. It is not a popular attraction, so visitors have a rare attraction to enjoy the tranquility of the bustling Seoul. Part of the palace range is now the address of Seoul History Museum. Go there, exit at Xidaemun Metro Exit 4, and walk about 10 minutes to reach these two locations.
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The Kyeonghee Palace was one of five palaces built during the Korean dynasty. Unfortunately, the palace was destroyed by fire and later demolished during the Japanese occupation to build a school for Japanese citizens. The current address was rebuilt in the 1990s and a small picture exhibition about the history of the Qingxi Palace was on display. It is not a popular attraction, so visitors have a rare attraction to enjoy the tranquility of the bustling Seoul. Part of the palace range is now the address of Seoul History Museum. Go there, exit at Xidaemun Metro Exit 4, and walk about 10 minutes to reach these two locations.
This palace is also one of the five palaces, during Japanese colonization. It was demolished a lot by the Japanese, so it looked a little newer after the reconstruction. It's also a good scenery.
Qingxi Palace is the smallest palace in Seoul's five major palaces. It's also the only one that doesn't accept tickets. It's located in the city center. It's only a few minutes'walk from the West Gate Station of Metro Line 5. Not many people are suitable for taking photos.
Walking here when you have time is a good choice!
This is the Palace of Seoul's History Museum, which has burned down all the existing imitations. For those who like history, you can see here the development of Seoul, especially the changes of Seoul in the past decades.
[Qingxi Palace] Recommendation Index: Four stars in the independent gate after crazy snapping to the next stop, Qingxi Palace. The Qingxi Palace is not far from the Independent Gate, nor near. It's probably a journey of one and a half Metro stations. The first Qingxi Palace is the most humble of the five ancient palaces. All the other four palaces need admission tickets. Only here is a free visit, and of course the scale is the smallest. Qingxi Palace has never been the main palace in history, and it has always been the status of departure from the palace. At the end of the 16th century, Renchen Riot destroyed Jingfu Palace and Changde Palace. Emperor Guang Haijun repaired the two palaces while building the Qingxi Palace as a temporary residence. The Qingxi Palace was built in the early 17th century. It was much larger than today. It was only because Japan invaded Korea again in the early 20th century that it destroyed the palace and fragmented it. It was not until after World War II that the Korean government restored part of the palace to form today's Qingxi Palace according to historical records.