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・ Shangba
・ Shangbei
・ Shangcai County
・ Shangcheng
・ Shangcheng County
・ Shangcheng District
・ Shangcheng Road Station
・ Shangchuan Island
・ Shangda Road Station
・ Shangdang
・ Shangdang Campaign
・ Shangdi
・ Shangdi Station
・ Shangdong Chinese Independent Christian Church
・ Shangdongjie, Sangzhi
Shangdu
・ Shangdu (disambiguation)
・ Shangdu County
・ Shangela Laquifa Wadley
・ Shangestan
・ Shangfang
・ Shangfang Mountain (Suzhou)
・ Shangfang Township, Hebei
・ Shangfeng
・ Shangfeng, Henan
・ Shangganling
・ Shangganling District
・ Shanggao County
・ Shangguan Wan'er
・ Shangguan Wan'er (TV series)


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Shangdu : ウィキペディア英語版
Shangdu


Shangdu (), also known as Xanadu (; Mongolian: (unicode:''Šandu'')), was the capital of Kublai Khan's Yuan dynasty in China, before he decided to move his throne to the Jin dynasty capital of Zhōngdū (), which he renamed Khanbaliq, present-day Beijing. Shangdu then became his summer capital. Shangdu (Xanadu) was visited by the Venetian traveller Marco Polo in about 1275, and was destroyed in 1369 by the Ming army under Zhu Yuanzhang. In 1797 historical accounts of the city inspired the famous poem ''Kubla Khan'' by the English Romantic poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge.
== Description ==
Shangdu was located in what is now called Inner Mongolia, north of Beijing, about northwest of the modern town of Duolun. The layout of the capital is roughly square shaped with sides of about 2,200 m; it consists of an "outer city", and an "inner city" in the southeast of the capital which has also roughly a square layout with sides about 1,400 m, and the palace, where Kublai Khan stayed in summer. The palace has sides of roughly 550 m, covering an area of around 40% the size of the Forbidden City in Beijing. The most visible modern-day remnants are the earthen walls though there is also a ground-level, circular brick platform in the centre of the inner enclosure.
The city, originally named Kaiping (, ''Kāipíng''), was designed by Chinese architect Liu Bingzhong from 1252 to 1256,〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Yuan dynasty )〕 and Liu implemented a "profoundly Chinese scheme for the city's architecture". In 1264 it was renamed Shangdu. At its zenith, over 100,000 people lived within its walls. In 1369 Shangdu was occupied by the Ming army and put to the torch. The last reigning Khan, Toghun Temür, fled the city, which was abandoned for several hundred years.
In 1872, Steven Bushell, affiliated with the British Legation in Beijing, visited the site and reported that remains of temples, blocks of marble, and tiles were still to be found there. By the 1990s, all these artifacts were completely gone, most likely collected by the inhabitants of the nearby town of Dolon Nor to construct their houses. The artwork is still seen in the walls of some Dolon Nor buildings.〔
Today, only ruins remain, surrounded by a grassy mound that was once the city walls. Since 2002, a restoration effort has been undertaken.〔 In June 2012, Shangdu was made a World Heritage Site.〔(Xanadu (China), Bassari Country (Senegal) and Grand Bassam (Côte d’Ivoire) added to UNESCO’s World Heritage List )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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