History

Explore the Forbidden City Virtually

The world's largest palace complex — 600 years of imperial power

The Forbidden City in Beijing is the world's largest palace complex, spanning 180 acres with 980 surviving buildings and 8,728 rooms. Built between 1406 and 1420 during the Ming Dynasty, it served as the imperial palace for 24 emperors across two dynasties — a seat of power forbidden to ordinary citizens for nearly 500 years.

Now known as the Palace Museum, this UNESCO World Heritage Site houses over 1.8 million artifacts and receives more visitors annually than any other museum on Earth. Virtual tours let you explore its vast courtyards and ornate halls without the crowds.

Google Arts & Culture: Inside the Palace Museum

🏯 Palace Museum Virtual Tour

Walk through the Meridian Gate, cross the Golden Water River, and enter the Hall of Supreme Harmony — the heart of imperial China — in immersive virtual galleries.

Enter the Palace →

What You Can Explore

💡 Pro Tip

The Forbidden City is designed along a perfect north-south axis. Start at the southern Meridian Gate and walk straight north through each successive hall — this is the exact path an emperor would have taken during a grand ceremony.

Fascinating Facts

  1. No Trees in the Outer Court — The three main halls have no trees to prevent assassins from hiding and to emphasize imperial authority against the open sky
  2. 9,999 Rooms — Legend says the complex has 9,999 rooms, one fewer than the mythical 10,000 in heaven's palace, as a sign of respect to the gods
  3. 52-Meter Moat — A 3.8-kilometer moat surrounds the entire complex, crossed by five marble bridges at the main entrance
  4. Golden Roof Tiles — The yellow glazed roof tiles were reserved exclusively for the emperor; using them elsewhere was punishable by death

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