Ditan Park

Dublin Core

Title

Ditan Park

Subject

Immovable Culture Heritage

Description

Ditan, also known as Fangze altar, is the second largest of the five altars in the ancient capital of Beijing. It was built in the ninth year of Jiajing (1530 A.D.) in the Ming Dynasty. It is located on the east side of Andingmen gate, corresponding to the temple of heaven, and across the river from Yonghe palace, Confucius Temple and Guozijian. Ditan is a solemn, simple and elegant royal temple. It is the place where the emperors of Ming and Qing Dynasties worship the God "huangdizhi". It is also the largest existing altar in China. With a total area of 37.4 hectares, the altar is square in shape. The whole building is simple, dignified and unique. From the whole to the part, it is designed in accordance with the traditions and symbolic legends of ancient China, such as "round sky and place", "green sky and yellow earth", "south and north sky", "dragon and phoenix" and "heaven and earth". There are many ancient buildings in Ditan, such as fangzetan, huangzhishi, Zaishu Pavilion, zhaigong, shenku and so on.

Source

isfiveoneonezero,worldheritagelayer,ditan park

Date

1530

Contributor

yl241@st-andrews.ac.uk

Type

Site

Identifier

338

Date Submitted

20/05/2021

Date Modified

05/21/2021 07:03:10 pm

Extent

cm x cm x cm

Spatial Coverage

current,39.95310179174879,116.40896797383905;

Europeana

Europeana Data Provider

Ditan Park

Europeana Type

TEXT

Site Item Type Metadata

Institutional nature

Building

Prim Media

499

End Date

till now

Contact

yl241@st-andrews.ac.uk

Citation

“Ditan Park,” STAGE, accessed December 13, 2025, https://stage.openvirtualworlds.org/omeka/items/show/500.

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