Nine-Dragon Wall
Appearance
A Nine-Dragon Wall or Nine-Dragon Screen (九龙壁; pinyin: Jiǔ Lóng Bì) is a screen wall with reliefs of nine different Chinese dragons. Such walls are typically found in imperial Chinese palaces and gardens.
Early reference to the tradition of putting a screen wall at the gate is found in the Analects, 3:22: therein, it is mentioned as a trivial ritual norm ("The princes of States have a screen intercepting the view at their gates". 邦君樹塞門, trans. by James Legge).
Partial list of Nine-Dragon Walls:
- Beihai Park, Beijing. Built in 1402, it features dragons on both sides.
- Forbidden City, Beijing. Built in 1771, it is located in front of the Palace of Tranquil Longevity.
- Datong
- Pingyao
- Hong Kong:
- Public Square Street Rest Garden, Yau Ma Tei. Located at the back of the Tin Hau Temple.
- Wong Tai Sin Temple
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nine-Dragon Walls.
- 9 (number)
- Nine Dragons (disambiguation page)