How to describe the Spring Festival in the Summer Palace in the Year of the Tiger

65438+

2. The mountains are full of pines and cypresses, the flowers under the forest are clustered, the peaches and willows on the shore are shaded, and the lake is fragrant.

The rainbow is in Liang Shi, and the long wind is blowing from the shore. The waves belong to the blue oars, and the shadow of the moon is still empty.

4, all the way to the bamboo curtain cloud, half curtain flower shadow moon cage sand.

5, a snail pill, a silver basin floating in the garden. There are thousands of scales, and there are golden waves in the moon.

The Summer Palace, formerly known as Qingyi Garden, is located in the western suburbs of Beijing, about 0/5km away from the urban area/kloc-0, covering an area of about 290 hectares and adjacent to Yuanmingyuan. It is a large-scale landscape garden with Kunming Lake and Wanshou Mountain as the background and Hangzhou West Lake as the basis, drawing lessons from the design techniques of Jiangnan gardens. It is also the most well-preserved royal palace, known as the "Royal Garden Museum" and a national key scenic spot.

Before the Qing Emperor Qianlong succeeded to the throne, there were four large royal gardens in the western suburbs of Beijing. In the fifteenth year of Qianlong (1750), Emperor Qianlong spent 4.48 million yuan to rebuild Qingyi Garden here, forming a royal garden area 20 kilometers from Tsinghua campus to Xiangshan. In the tenth year of Xianfeng (1860), Qingyi Garden was burned by the British and French allied forces.

In the 14th year of Guangxu (1888), it was rebuilt and renamed the Summer Palace as a summer amusement park. In the 26th year of Guangxu (1900), the Summer Palace was destroyed by "Eight-Nation Alliance" and its treasures were looted. After the demise of the Qing Dynasty, the Summer Palace was destroyed again during the period of warlord melee and Kuomintang rule.