Meiling Palace

Villa in Nanjing, China
32°02′44″N 118°50′47″E / 32.045479°N 118.846507°E / 32.045479; 118.846507Completed1934Technical detailsMaterialBrickFloor count2 + basement and mezzanineFloor areac.2000 m2Other informationPublic transit accessMetro Line 2 to Xiamafang Station, exit 2; bus 34 to Bo'aiyuan[1]

Meiling Palace (Chinese: 美齡宮, aka Meiling Villa and Meiling Gong) is a large villa in Nanjing, China, built by the chairman of the Chinese National Government, Chiang Kai-Shek, for his wife, Soong Meiling. It is known formally as the National Government Chairman Residence (Chinese: 国民政府主席官邸).[1]

The villa is located below Purple Mountain, about 6 km from Nanjing's city centre in the Zhongshan Mountain Scenic Area.[2] It is the largest villa in Nanjing, with a floor area of more than 2,000 m2.[1]

Meiling Palace was completed in 1934, as a residence for the chairman of the Chinese National Government.[1] Chiang Kai-Shek gave the mansion to his wife on her birthday, 4 March, and the couple moved there in summer 1936.[3] Later it was used as a base for officials visiting the Sun Yat-sen Mausoleum, located nearby. After the end of the war between China and Japan in 1946, the National Government moved back to Nanjing and Chiang Kai-Shek used this villa as his official residence.

Room inside the villa

The exterior of the villa was built in a traditional Chinese style with double eaves and a roof of green glazed tiles.[1] There are more than a thousand phoenixes carved on the roof tiles. The Chinese artist Chen Zhifo (1896–1962) painted the eaves with birds and flowers. Viewed from above, the trees surrounding the villa are in the form of a necklace. The interior was in a western style.

The building has two main storeys, a basement, and a mezzanine between the first and second floors. In the basement, there is an exhibition of paintings by Soong Meiling.[4] On the second floor, there is a private chapel.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Meiling Palace". Travel China Guide. Retrieved 30 September 2023.
  2. ^ "Meiling Palace, Nanjing, China". China Travel Guide. Retrieved 30 September 2023.
  3. ^ Pantsov, Alexander V. (2023). "Chapter 11 – For a New Life!". Victorious in Defeat: The Life and Times of Chiang Kai-shek, China, 1887–1975. Yale University Press. p. 201. ISBN 978-0300271690.
  4. ^ "Meiling Palace". Lonely Planet. Retrieved 30 September 2023.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Meiling Gong.
  • On YouTube:
    • Drone footage captures views of China Meiling Palace by the South China Morning Post
    • Aerial view of Mei-ling Palace in Nanjing by Oriental Image
    • Meiling Palace in Nanjing – tour of the villa (in Chinese)
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