The Ming Palace ( Chinese : 明故宫 ; pinyin : Míng Gùgōng ; literally: "Ming Former Palace"), also known as the " Forbidden City of Nanjing ", was the 14th-century imperial palace of the early Ming dynasty , when Nanjing was the capital of China.
Year | Metadata | Sections | Top Words | First Paragraph |
2018 |
25308 characters 10 sections 22 paragraphs 10 images 34 internal links 4 external links |
palace 0.515 gate 0.247 meridian 0.230 outer 0.183 emperor 0.163 reserve 0.153 survive 0.122 beiping 0.115 di 0.115 hongguang 0.115 portion 0.115 building 0.104 zhu 0.101 capital 0.094 ming 0.092 |
The Ming Palace ( Chinese : 明故宫 ; pinyin : Míng Gùgōng ; literally: "Ming Former Palace"), also known as the " Forbidden City of Nanjing ", was the 14th-century imperial palace of the early Ming dynasty , when Nanjing was the capital of China. |
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2017 |
24900 characters 10 sections 22 paragraphs 10 images 33 internal links 3 external links |
palace 0.515 gate 0.247 meridian 0.230 outer 0.183 emperor 0.163 reserve 0.153 survive 0.122 beiping 0.115 di 0.115 hongguang 0.115 portion 0.115 building 0.104 zhu 0.101 capital 0.094 ming 0.092 |
The Ming Palace ( Chinese : 明故宫 ; pinyin : Míng Gùgōng ; literally: "Ming Former Palace"), also known as the " Forbidden City of Nanjing ", was the 14th-century imperial palace of the early Ming dynasty , when Nanjing was the capital of China. |
|
2016 |
24900 characters 10 sections 22 paragraphs 10 images 33 internal links 3 external links |
palace 0.515 gate 0.247 meridian 0.230 outer 0.183 emperor 0.163 reserve 0.153 survive 0.122 beiping 0.115 di 0.115 hongguang 0.115 portion 0.115 building 0.104 zhu 0.101 capital 0.094 ming 0.092 |
The Ming Palace ( Chinese : 明故宫 ; pinyin : Míng Gùgōng ; literally: "Ming Former Palace"), also known as the " Forbidden City of Nanjing ", was the 14th-century imperial palace of the early Ming dynasty , when Nanjing was the capital of China. |
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2015 |
22983 characters 8 sections 22 paragraphs 9 images 32 internal links 3 external links |
palace 0.505 gate 0.249 meridian 0.231 outer 0.184 emperor 0.164 reserve 0.154 survive 0.123 beiping 0.116 di 0.116 hongguang 0.116 portion 0.116 building 0.105 zhu 0.102 capital 0.095 column 0.092 |
The Ming Palace , also known as the Forbidden City of Nanjing ( Chinese : 明故宫 ; pinyin : Míng Gùgōng ), was the 14th-century imperial palace of the early Ming dynasty , when Nanjing was the capital of China. |
|
2014 |
22300 characters 7 sections 21 paragraphs 9 images 30 internal links 3 external links |
palace 0.495 gate 0.251 meridian 0.233 outer 0.186 emperor 0.165 reserve 0.155 survive 0.124 beiping 0.117 di 0.117 hongguang 0.117 portion 0.117 building 0.106 zhu 0.102 capital 0.096 column 0.093 |
The Ming Palace , also known as the Forbidden City of Nanjing ( Chinese : 明故宫 ; pinyin : Míng Gùgōng ), was the 14th-century imperial palace of the early Ming dynasty , when Nanjing was the capital of China. |
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2013 |
18297 characters 3 sections 18 paragraphs 9 images 26 internal links 2 external links |
palace 0.485 gate 0.261 meridian 0.242 outer 0.193 emperor 0.172 portion 0.161 reserve 0.161 survive 0.128 hongguang 0.121 capital 0.099 column 0.096 jianwen 0.096 carvings 0.096 building 0.094 zhu 0.085 |
The Ming Palace , also known as the Forbidden City of Nanjing ( Chinese : 明故宫 ; pinyin : Míng Gùgōng ), was the 14th-century imperial palace of the early Ming Dynasty , when Nanjing was the capital of China. |
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2012 |
18301 characters 3 sections 18 paragraphs 9 images 26 internal links 2 external links |
palace 0.486 gate 0.261 meridian 0.242 outer 0.193 emperor 0.172 portion 0.161 reserve 0.161 survive 0.129 hongguang 0.121 capital 0.099 column 0.096 jianwen 0.096 carvings 0.096 building 0.094 zhu 0.085 |
The Ming Palace , also known as the Forbidden City of Nanjing ( Chinese : 明故宫 ; pinyin : Míng Gùgōng ), was the 14th-century imperial palace of the early Ming Dynasty , when Nanjing was the capital of China. |
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2011 |
9714 characters 2 sections 11 paragraphs 8 images 13 internal links 1 external links |
palace 0.411 hongguang 0.332 emperor 0.223 majestic 0.166 1645 0.166 armies 0.166 reserve 0.166 retained 0.166 zicheng 0.166 明故宫 0.166 gōng 0.166 ming 0.150 foundations 0.132 columns 0.132 fled 0.132 |
Ming Palace ( Chinese : 明故宫 ; pinyin : Míng gùgōng ) in Nanjing , present day Jiangsu province, China was the 14th century imperial palace of the Hongwu Emperor , the first emperor of the Ming Dynasty . |
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2009 |
2129 characters 1 sections 2 paragraphs 0 images 8 internal links 1 external links |
palace 0.458 form 0.324 foundations 0.258 columns 0.258 carved 0.258 14th 0.258 beijing 0.229 forbidden 0.219 walls 0.219 emperor 0.218 son 0.192 stones 0.192 yongle 0.153 1644 0.139 today 0.139 |
The 14th century Ming Palace in Nanjing , China was the imperial palace of the Hongwu Emperor , the first emperor of the Ming Dynasty . This palace was replaced in Beijing in the form of the Forbidden City by his son, the Yongle Emperor , when he moved the capital to Beijing. The palace was destroyed by the Qing in 1644, and today only some foundations, walls, carved stones and columns remain. |
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2008 |
1967 characters 1 sections 1 paragraphs 0 images 8 internal links 1 external links |
palace 0.458 form 0.324 foundations 0.258 columns 0.258 carved 0.258 14th 0.258 beijing 0.229 forbidden 0.219 walls 0.219 emperor 0.218 son 0.192 stones 0.192 yongle 0.153 1644 0.139 today 0.139 |
The 14th century Ming Palace in Nanjing , China was the imperial palace of the Hongwu Emperor , the first emperor of the Ming Dynasty . This palace was replicated in Beijing in the form of the Forbidden City by his son, the Yongle Emperor , when he moved the capital to Beijing. The palace was destroyed by the Qing in 1644, and today only some foundations, walls, carved stones and columns remain. |
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2007 |
1967 characters 1 sections 1 paragraphs 0 images 9 internal links 1 external links |
palace 0.499 foundations 0.281 columns 0.281 carved 0.281 14th 0.281 beijing 0.250 walls 0.239 emperor 0.237 son 0.209 stones 0.209 yongle 0.167 1644 0.151 today 0.151 moved 0.137 century 0.125 |
The 14th century Ming Palace in Nanjing , China was the imperial palace of the Hongwu Emperor , the first emperor of the Ming Dynasty . This palace was replicated in Beijing by his son, the Yongle Emperor , when he moved the capital to Beijing. The palace was destroyed by the Qing in 1644 , and today only some foundations, walls, carved stones and columns remain. |
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2006 |
1764 characters 1 sections 1 paragraphs 0 images 6 internal links 1 external links |
palace 0.595 zhu 0.443 di 0.421 beijing 0.298 yuanzhang 0.222 1644 0.180 moved 0.163 destroyed 0.149 ming 0.126 imperial 0.124 capital 0.103 qing 0.086 dynasty 0.056 china 0.023 nanjing 0.008 |
Ming Palace, Nanjing was Zhu Yuanzhang's imperial palace during the Ming Dynasty in Nanjing, China . This palace was replicated in Beijing by Zhu Di when he moved the capital in Beijing . The palace was destroyed by the Qing in 1644 . |