Difference between revisions of "National Palace Museum"

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(Created page with " '''National Palace Museum''' can refer to: *The National Palace Museum, Taipei, Taiwan (not to be confused with the Palace Museum located within the Forbidden City, B...")
 
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::''Not to be confused with the Palace Museum located within the [[Forbidden City]], Beijing, China, or the National Palace Museum of Korea, located on the grounds of [[Gyeongbokgung Palace]], Seoul, South Korea.''
  
'''National Palace Museum''' can refer to:
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The National Palace Museum, located in [[Taipei]] and established in 1965, is one of the chief museums in [[Taiwan]]. Its collection includes some 650,000 objects from [[Qing dynasty]] imperial collections, removed from China's first national museum, the Antiques Exhibition Hall (est. [[1913]]) and brought to Taiwan in 1948-1949 by the Republic of China government as Communist forces forcibly took over mainland China.
*The [[National Palace Museum]], Taipei, Taiwan (not to be confused with the Palace Museum located within the [[Forbidden City]], Beijing, China)
 
*The National Palace Museum of Korea, located on the grounds of [[Gyeongbokgung Palace]], Seoul, South Korea.
 
  
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==References==
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*Guo Changhong, "The Qing Palace: from a Forbidden City to a Public Heritage," ''Museum International'' 60:1-2 (2008), 83.
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[[Category:Historic Buildings]]

Revision as of 02:10, 13 December 2019

Not to be confused with the Palace Museum located within the Forbidden City, Beijing, China, or the National Palace Museum of Korea, located on the grounds of Gyeongbokgung Palace, Seoul, South Korea.

The National Palace Museum, located in Taipei and established in 1965, is one of the chief museums in Taiwan. Its collection includes some 650,000 objects from Qing dynasty imperial collections, removed from China's first national museum, the Antiques Exhibition Hall (est. 1913) and brought to Taiwan in 1948-1949 by the Republic of China government as Communist forces forcibly took over mainland China.

References

  • Guo Changhong, "The Qing Palace: from a Forbidden City to a Public Heritage," Museum International 60:1-2 (2008), 83.