Museum | China Imperial Examination Museum·Jiangnan Gongyuan
🌟Highlights:
National first-class museum, with new and old museums opposite each other.
The new museum goes underground along the P2 passage, with a total of four floors, visited from top to bottom.
The old museum mainly features the style of the Qinhuai River.
It takes about 2 hours to visit both museums; it is quite suitable for children's knowledge popularization.
🌟Opening Information:
09:00-21:00 (Chinese statutory holidays 09:00-22:00)
Address: No. 1 Jinling Road, Fuzimiao, Qinhuai District, Nanjing
🌈'Zhuangyuan' Plaque (P6)
Qing Qianlong 34th year (1769) 1769 Collection
Chen Chuzhe (1736-1787), courtesy name Zai Chu, passed the Jiangnan provincial examination in the 25th year of Qianlong, and was known as 'Er Chen' with his younger brother Chen Xizhe for their poetry. In the 34th year of Qianlong (1769), he was the top scholar in the imperial examination and was appointed as a compiler in the Hanlin Academy. He served as a Dao member and twice as a joint examiner for the imperial examination.
The Jiangnan Gongyuan in Jiankang (Nanjing) was established in the 4th year of Qiandao of Song Xiaozong (1168) by the prefect Shi Zhengzhi. It was originally a county school examination venue. After continuous expansion during the Ming and Qing Dynasties, by the Guangxu period of the Qing Dynasty, the Jiangnan Gongyuan had become a large-scale examination venue with 20,644 examination rooms, more than a thousand official rooms for chief examiners, supervisors, examiners, inspectors, joint examiners, and executive officials, plus dining rooms, warehouses, miscellaneous services, guards, and other rooms, as well as land for ponds, gardens, bridges, passages, and watchtowers. It was the largest examination venue in the country in terms of scale, land area, and number of buildings.
China Imperial Examination Museum (Jiangnan Gongyuan)
There are many layers inside. It is worth a place to understand in depth why Chinese people must take the test for fame and fame. The tradition of rising to wealth and Guangzong Yaozu for thousands of years is opportunity and lock.
Very recommended attractions, fun and content density are good, there are 29 test papers in Jiaqing Palace, the South Yard can directly punch in the Qinhuai River, there are few people and no queues, the North Park has many content, each has its own characteristics
It is still worth seeing, went to the Qinhuai River Confucius Temple Qinhuai scenery belt, Jiangnan Gongyuan, the history of the imperial examination 1300 years, and trained more than 800 Zhuangyuan, 100,000 Jinshi and countless talents.
It is worth a look. Note that it is divided into the southern half of the area and the northern half of the area. A QR code for buying tickets can pass all of them. The exhibits in the museum are rich and the content is huge. There is a small movie explanation version, played on the whole point, the content is not long, you can watch it in more than ten minutes, and the viewing effect is very good. Finally, after seeing Mingyuan Building, you can also see the real residual house. The exit is a big shopping mall, hidden in the Yuhuashi Museum. There are a lot of cultural and creative products, that is, the price is small. In short, it is worth a look.
After the epidemic, I finally could travel. I came to Nanjing, where I was thinking of it. At night, the Qinhuai River was crowded. We hid in the Jiangnan Gongyuan. There were a lot of people in the place where the tickets were collected. I saw a lot of introductions to the imperial examinations. The Gongyuan was large in scale and could not be visited in an hour!
It is still a museum worth visiting. It is very large and it just avoids the large number of people in the Confucius Temple during the Chinese New Year. There are a lot of things in the Chinese Imperial Examination Museum, and there are very few things to see in the Jiangnan Gongyuan opposite.
A ticket is universal in the South Hall and the North Hall, and it still takes a lot of time to see it on both sides. I just met a volunteer obligation to explain, and I carefully listened to the founding and development of the imperial examinations and their abolition. In the afternoon, I rushed to the Yunnan Museum, and some content was not carefully read, and the time was still less reserved.
The most meaningful place of the trip to Nanjing, the unique decoration design, let us experience the imperial examination system established from Sui and Tang Dynasty to the heyday of the Ming and Qing Dynasties, move step by step, and with the cooperation of the lighting, full of cultural atmosphere.