Ming Palace

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.

Page Revisions

Year Metadata Sections Top Words First Paragraph
2018

25308 characters

10 sections

22 paragraphs

10 images

34 internal links

4 external links

1. History

2. The Ming Palace today

3. Transportation

4. References

5. External links

6. See also

palace 0.515

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outer 0.183

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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.

2017

24900 characters

10 sections

22 paragraphs

10 images

33 internal links

3 external links

1. History

2. The Ming Palace today

3. Transportation

4. References

5. External links

6. See also

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

1. History

2. The Ming Palace today

3. Transportation

4. References

5. External links

6. See also

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.

2015

22983 characters

8 sections

22 paragraphs

9 images

32 internal links

3 external links

1. History

2. The Ming Palace today

3. Transportation

4. References

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

1. History

2. The Ming Palace today

3. References

palace 0.495

gate 0.251

meridian 0.233

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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.

2013

18297 characters

3 sections

18 paragraphs

9 images

26 internal links

2 external links

1. History

2. The Ming Palace today

3. References

palace 0.485

gate 0.261

meridian 0.242

outer 0.193

emperor 0.172

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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.

2012

18301 characters

3 sections

18 paragraphs

9 images

26 internal links

2 external links

1. History

2. The Ming Palace today

3. References

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.

2011

9714 characters

2 sections

11 paragraphs

8 images

13 internal links

1 external links

1. History

2. References

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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 gù​gōng ) in Nanjing , present day Jiangsu province, China was the 14th century imperial palace of the Hongwu Emperor , the first emperor of the Ming Dynasty .

2009

2129 characters

1 sections

2 paragraphs

0 images

8 internal links

1 external links

1. References

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.

2008

1967 characters

1 sections

1 paragraphs

0 images

8 internal links

1 external links

1. References

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.

2007

1967 characters

1 sections

1 paragraphs

0 images

9 internal links

1 external links

1. References

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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.

2006

1764 characters

1 sections

1 paragraphs

0 images

6 internal links

1 external links

1. Reference

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 .