18101960_PekingLARGE

18 October 1860 : Peking’s Summer Palace destroyed

British troops occupying Peking, China loot and burn the Yuanmingyuan, the summer residence of the Manchu emperors, originally built in the 18th century. China’s Qing leadership surrendered to the Franco-British expeditionary force soon after, ending the Second Opium War and Chinese hopes of reversing the tide of foreign domination in its national affairs. In the 1870s, Chinese Empress Dowager Cixi began . . .

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British troops occupying Peking, China loot and burn the Yuanmingyuan, the summer residence of the Manchu emperors, originally built in the 18th century. China’s Qing leadership surrendered to the Franco-British expeditionary force soon after, ending the Second Opium War and Chinese hopes of reversing the tide of foreign domination in its national affairs. In the 1870s, Chinese Empress Dowager Cixi began rebuilding the palace and its stunning gardens, renaming it Yiheyuan, or Garden of Good Health and Harmony. In 1900, during the Boxer Rebellion, the palace was burned again by Western troops and it remained dilapidated until the Chinese communists rebuilt it in the 1950s

 
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