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The Temple of Heaven is the most holy of Beijing's Imperial temples.
This is where the Emperor came every winter solstice to worship
heaven and to solemnly pray for a good harvest. In ancient China,
only the Emperor was allowed to directly worship heaven. Imperial
subjects were permitted only to worship their ancestors and river
and mountain gods. Therefore, the ceremony conducted at the Temple
of Heaven was an act of national importance. Since Imperial rule
was legitimized by the"Mandate Of Heaven", a bad harvest
could be interpreted as his fall from heaven's favor and threaten
the stability of his reign. So, it was not without a measure of
self-interest that the Emperor fervently prayed heaven to provide
a very good crop.
In line with the Confucianist revival during
the Ming dynasty, the sacred harvest ceremony was combined with
the Emperor's worship of his ancestors. This embellishment can
also be viewed as self-serving. For according to the Confucian
pattern of social organization, just as the Emperor respected
his ancestors, so a younger brother should respect an elder brother,
a wife her husband, a son his father, and a nation's subjects
their ruler. Incorporating ancestor worship within the most solemn
ceremony of the Imperial ritual calendar indirectly reinforced
the social philosophy that perpetuated the Emperor's power.
The design of the Temple of Heaven complex, true
to its sacred purpose, refers to the mystical cosmological laws
believed to be central to the workings of the universe. Hence,
complex numerological permutations operate within its design.
For example, because the number nine was considered to be the
most powerful digit, you will see that the slabs that form the
Circular Altar have been lain in multiples of nine. Similarly
within the Hall of Prayer for Good Harvest, the interior twenty-eight
columns are divided into four central pillars to represent the
seasons, twelve inner columns to represent the months and twelve
outer columns to represent the two hour tranches that make up
a day. There are many such examples of this intense numerology
at play.
Whereas in Imperial times commoners were not
allowed to enter the enormous park, now for a minimal fee Chinese
citizens can enjoy it all day long. Were you to visit at dawn
you'd be surprised by the number of people there performing their
morning exercises. Next to an older person practicing the slow
and flowing movements of Tai Qi, there might be a younger one
performing vigorous karate-like punches and kicks. One group might
be learning the ancient martial art of sword-fighting, while another
might be practising a traditional dance. Should you have the energy
and the inclination, it is well worth waking up early one morning
and visiting this park to watch such events take place.
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