Cao Cao The city of
Ye by the
Zhang River was the seat of the
Wei Commandery and an important regional center in the
Han dynasty. When the dynasty fractured into warlord states, the city served as the headquarters of
Yuan Shao. After Yuan Shao's death, rival warlord
Cao Cao took control of the city in the
Battle of Ye in 204 and made the city his chief residence. As the years of war had destroyed the inner city, Cao Cao set about rebuilding the city in the mold of an imperial capital. He initiated a number of works in Ye, digging canals in and around the city to improve irrigation and drainage, and building the Hall of Civil Splendour () which was to become the centerpiece of Ye's palace complex. The Bronze Bird Terrace was erected in the northwest corner of the city in 210 as part of these works. It was soon joined by two shorter terraces in 213, the Metal Tiger Terrace () to the south and the Ice Well Terrace () to the north. Together, they are referred to as the Three Terraces (). The Bronze Bird Terrace was recorded to be 10
zhang high, which translates to about 23 meters, while the other two terraces were shorter at 8
zhang (~18 meters). Modern observers measure the bases of the Bronze Bird Terrace and the Metal Tiger Terrace at 122 m north to south and 70 m east to west. Atop the terraces were
pavilions of more than a hundred rooms each: According to the
Wen Xuan, the Bronze Bird had 101 rooms, Metal Tiger had 109, and Ice Well had 145. The terraces were linked to each other and the palace by
raised walkways, and had ample street-level access connecting them with the rest of the city. Underneath the terraces were storage facilities for grain, salt, water, fuel, graphite, and—in the case of the Ice Well Terrace—ice. Around the terraces sprang the Bronze Bird Garden (), also known as the West Garden () since it was immediately west of the palace. The garden took up the whole northwestern quadrant of the city. The name "Bronze Bird Terrace" evokes the Western Han capital
Chang'an since it references auspicious symbols from an old song: "To the west of Chang'an, a pair of circular watchtowers, / On top of them perches a pair of Bronze Birds. / They sing once, and five grains grow; / They sing again, and five grains ripen". The Metal Tiger Terrace was named after the
tiger tally that Cao Cao received from the Han emperor as part of the
Nine Bestowments in 213.
Period of Disunity After Cao Cao died in 220, his son
Cao Pi forced the abdication of the last emperor of Eastern Han, becoming the first emperor of
Cao Wei. Although the main capital of Wei was relocated to
Luoyang, Ye was still considered a secondary "northern capital". Cao Wei was replaced by the
Jin dynasty in 263, who were later forced out of northern China by a series of non-
Han states. Ye became the capital of several of these states: the
Later Zhao (319–351),
Former Yan (337–370),
Ran Wei (350–352),
Eastern Wei (534–550), and
Northern Qi (550–577).
Shi Hu of the Later Zhao became emperor in 334 through a coup against his cousin
Shi Hong, and made Ye his capital next year. Known for his extravagance and indulgence, Shi Hu utilized up to 400,000 workers on construction projects in his new capital city along with Chang'an and Luoyang. The Three Terraces of Ye, which had fallen into disrepair up to this point, were transformed by these constructions to be "more adorned and embellished than they were at the beginning of [Cao] Wei". The Bronze Bird Terrace was heightened to 12
zhang, and its top was covered by a circular pavilion with "linking ridgepoles and
rafters", five stories high, and topped with a bronze bird sculpture. Together, the Bronze Bird Terrace and its pavilion measured 27
zhang tall. The Metal Tiger Terrace was renamed to Metal Phoenix Terrace () to avoid a
naming taboo as "tiger" (
hu) is Shi Hu's given name. '' head dated to the Eastern Wei to Northern Qi dynasties unearthed from the Bronze Bird Terrace site, Yecheng Musuem Shi Hu died in 349, after which his sons killed one another for the throne only to be exterminated by
Ran Min, whose state of Ran Wei lasted two years in Ye before being conquered by
Murong Jun of the Former Yan in 352. Murong Jun moved his capital to Ye in 357, upon which he ordered the repair of its palaces and the Bronze Bird Terrace. Former Yan fell to
Former Qin in 370, and Ye only became capital again under Eastern Wei and then the Northern Qi. In 558, the old Three Terraces were renovated under the Northern Qi, which had mobilized 300,000 three hundred thousand workmen to make them "higher and grander" than ever before. The terraces were renamed again at this time, with Bronze Bird being renamed as Golden Phoenix (), Metal Tiger as Sagely Response (), and Ice Well as Magnificent Light (). Triggered by an invasion by the
Northern Zhou in 577, Northern Qi quickly disintegrated within a month, with large scale defections of court and military personnel. The incoming
Emperor Wu of Northern Zhou issued the "Edict to Destroy Gardens and Terraces of the State of Qi" () on 2 March 577 in which he denounced the wasteful extravagance of the Qi, proclaimed a return to restraint and frugality, and ordered the destruction of Ye's gardens and the Three Terraces. Emperor Wu died the next year, and his son
Emperor Xuan died less than a year on the throne. Emperor Xuan's father-in-law
Yang Jian made a bid for the throne, which prompted the Zhou loyalist general
Yuchi Jiong to rise against him in Ye. After Yuchi Jiong was defeated in 580, Yang Jian evacuated the population of Ye and razed the city to the ground. Yang Jian would declare himself emperor of the
Sui dynasty in 581 and go on to reunify China in 589, ending the
Period of Disunity that started since the
end of the Han dynasty in 220.
Later history Despite the destruction of Ye and the terrace buildings, the foundations of the Three Terraces survived into the
Song and
Yuan periods. A Buddhist temple named Yongning Temple () was erected on the foundations of the Bronze Bird Terrace, while a
Taoist monastery named Dongxiao Monastery () was built on the Metal Tiger's. The Ice Well Terrace was noted to have been washed by the Zhang River, causing one corner to erode away. Today, after centuries of flooding by the Zhang River, only the Metal Tiger Terrace remained visible, while the Bronze Bird Terrace could only be identified through archaeology. The extant Metal Tiger Terrace (now known as the Metal Phoenix), mistakenly identified by the locals as the more famous Bronze Bird Terrace, is only 12 meters tall. The site of the Three Terraces, now administratively in Santai village (; "Three Terrace Village") of
Linzhang County, was made into a park of 20 square kilometers, costing 75.62 million
yuan. The park includes the original foundations of the Golden Phoenix Terrace, a museum showing various unearthed artifacts, and locales commemorating Cao Cao and
Jian'an poetry. ==In poetry==