Jing Wang Fu is located on the west bank of Lijiang River in Guilin, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. From a distance, it looks like a temple, and the whole wall is painted with a layer of paint similar to the color of "Emperor's robes".
When I came to Wang Fu, I saw the words "Jingjiang Wang Fu" inscribed by Wang Jing on the plaque above the main entrance. King Palace was built in the fifth year of Hongwu in Ming Dynasty, and basically completed in the ninth year of Hongwu. It has a history of more than 630 years, and the Royal City of Guilin was built more than 30 years earlier than the Forbidden City in Beijing. Jing Wang Mi was built by Zhu Shouqian, the nephew of Zhu Yuanzhang, with a grand scale and imposing momentum.
"First, the Duxiufeng, then the King's Palace." Zhu Shouqian, the king of Jingjiang at that time, was convinced of the geomantic theory and decided to build the Wang Fu here with his back to Du Xiufeng, where Long Mai was located. Just as the Forbidden City was built on the central axis of Beijing, the Jinggong was built on the central axis of Guilin. Jing Wang Mi has four gates: Li Duan, Guang Zhi, Tijen and Zunyi. The ancestral temple is on the left and the country is on the right.
There are portal, portal, bedroom, crescent pond, back garden and so on. There are various buildings in the city, such as Baoshan Hall, Qingyue Pavilion, Xu Ling Terrace, Kexinxuan, Xuanwu Pavilion and Three Temples. And the crescent pool in the imperial garden can also be used for boating.
In the ninth year of Shunzhi in Qing Dynasty, Kong Youde, king of Dingnan, couldn't resist the rebel attack. The palace was destroyed by fire and all the buildings in the city were in ruins. At present, the city walls and four gates are still intact, and the buildings in the city were rebuilt on the original basis after the end of War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression.