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Museum of the Imperial Palace of Manchukuo

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About Museum of the Imperial Palace of Manchukuo

The Museum of the Imperial Palace of Manchukuo is a museum in the northeastern corner of Changchun, Jilin area, upper east China. The castle was the official living arrangement made by the Imperial Japanese Army for China's last sovereign Puyi to live in as a major aspect of his part as Emperor of the Japanese manikin territory of Manchukuo. In the People's Republic of China the structures are for the most part alluded to as the Puppet Emperor's Palace and Exhibition Hall.
The Manchurian Imperial Palace was outlined as a small scale iant of the Forbidden City in Beijing. It was isolated into an internal court and external court. The external or front court was utilized for authoritative purposes and the inward or back court as the illustrious home. The castle covers a region of 43,000 square meters. The internal court incorporates the private living quarters for Puyi and his family. Its primary structures incorporate the Jixi Building on the west patio and the Tongde Hall on the east yard. The external court contained structures for issues of state.
The engineering of the structures is in an extensive iety of styles: Chinese, Japanese, and European. Inside the complex were gardens, including rockeries and a fish lake, a swimming pool, air-strike protect, a tennis court, a little green and a pony track. Around the yards were nine two-story brick houses for the Manchukuo Imperial Guard, and the whole complex was encompassed by high solid dividers.
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