Donghuamen is the gate of the Forbidden City.

Donghuamen is the east gate of the Forbidden City, opposite to Xihuamen, and it is one of the relatively complete existing gates of Miyagi in Nanjing. Now it has been turned into Donghuamen Ruins Park and listed as a national key cultural relics protection unit. The shape of Donghuamen is similar to that of Xi 'anmen, but its sumeru seats are all plain, with no leaf carving, and the style is simple, which truly reflects the order of Zhu Yuanzhang, the Ming Taizu, who simply built a palace.

There are four doors in the Forbidden City. The main entrance is called Wumen, the east entrance is called Donghuamen, the west entrance is called Xihuamen, and the north entrance is called Shenwumen. Among them, Donghuamen corresponds to Xihuamen, and there is a dismount monument outside the door. The golden water in the gate flows north and south, with 1 stone bridge.

Extended data

The Forbidden City in Beijing is the imperial palace of China in Ming and Qing Dynasties, formerly known as the Forbidden City, located in the center of Beijing's central axis. The Forbidden City in Beijing is centered on three halls, covering an area of about 720,000 square meters, with a construction area of about10.5 million square meters. There are more than 70 palaces and 9000 houses. The Forbidden City in Beijing is one of the largest and best-preserved ancient wooden structures in the world. It is a national AAAAA tourist attraction. 196 1 was listed as the first batch of national key cultural relics protection units, and 1987 was listed as a world cultural heritage.