There are three such "residences" in Xuzhou. The one currently best preserved is the one located at the northern foot of Yunlong Mountain. The palace was opened as the location of the Xuzhou Museum in 1959 and was built on the east side of the palace in 1979. The antique monument garden. According to Sun Tongyi, an expert on ancient architecture in Xuzhou, the palace was built in the 22nd year of Qianlong (1757) and was expanded on the basis of the original Yuwang Temple. The Qianlong Palace in Xuzhou starts from the northern foot of Yunlong Mountain in the south, Tushan in the north, Yuqiao in the east, and the current Zhongshan Road in the west. There are three courtyards on the front, back and left. There are dozens of auxiliary halls on both sides of the main hall, and gardens, rockeries and pavilions on the left and right. , terrace, pavilion, pavilion, etc.
In addition, there are also Qianlong palaces in Liuquan in the north of Xuzhou and in the north of Malingshan in Xinyi. Liuquan Qianlong Palace was built in the 35th year of Qianlong's reign (1770). It is said that it was built in the style of the Forbidden City in Beijing. Although it is small in scale, it is majestic. There is a Qianlong Palace on the top of Daying in Maling Mountain in Xinyi. It was built during Qianlong's southern tour to Suqian in 1752. Qianlong also wrote "Three Poems on Dong'ao Mountain". Dong'ao Mountain is Maling Mountain. One of the poems says: "The green fields, flat hills and green dais pattern refer to the small pair of houses with a happy meaning. Zhongwu is full of Dao Cai Quanshi, which has already shown the beauty of the country."
After the late Qing Dynasty, the three palaces gradually destruction. Liuquan Palace was destroyed in the seventh year of Xianfeng (1878), and now only the garden rockery and dozens of cypress trees remain, as well as the "Palace Lake" nearby. Only the foundation of the palace remains in Xinyi Palace, and the stone plaque "Reading and Brewing Spring Tea" written by Liu Yong, a great scholar of the Qianlong Dynasty, is still well preserved.
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