Zhongdu, the "Central Capital" of the
Jurchen Jin dynasty, was located at a nearby site now part of
Xicheng District. It was destroyed by
Genghis Khan in 1215 when the Jin court began contemplating a move south to a more defensible capital such as
Kaifeng. The Imperial Mint () established in 1260 and responsible for the printing of
jiaochao, the Yuan
fiat paper money, was probably located at nearby Yanjing even before the establishment of the new capital. In 1264,
Kublai Khan visited the
Daming Palace on
Jade Island in
Taiye Lake and was so enchanted with the site that he directed his capital to be constructed around the garden. The chief architect and planner of the capital was
Liu Bingzhong, who also served as supervisor of its construction. His student
Guo Shoujing and the
Muslim Ikhtiyar al-Din were also involved. The construction of the walls of the city began in the same year, while the main imperial palace () was built from 1274 onwards. The design of Khanbaliq followed several rules laid down in the
Confucian classic The Rites of Zhou, including "9 vertical and horizontal axes", "palaces in front, markets in back", "ancestral worship to the left, divine worship to the right". It was broad in scale, strict in planning and execution, and complete in equipment. A year after the 1271 establishment of the
Yuan dynasty, Kublai Khan proclaimed the city his capital under the name
Dadu as it is interpreted capital city in Hanzi and named Khanbaliq as referred in the state diplomatic letters in Mongolian. The construction was not fully completed until 1293. His previous seat at
Shangdu (Xanadu) became the
summer capital. As part of the
Great Khans' policy of
religious tolerance, Khanbaliq had various
houses of worship. Almost every major
religious tradition and
sect in
China and the wider world had a presence in the city.
Orders of
rabbi,
Taoist sects,
Mongol shamans, and various kinds of
Hindu religious groups were some of the most well-known
religious minorities in the city.
Buddhists,
Muslims,
Church of the East Christians,
Catholics, and
Confucianists were more common. Confucians and Taoists were extremely well-regarded by most
Mongol nobles, and "some of the Mongols' most esteemed advisors were Taoists and Confucians." The former capital was renamed
Beiping (北平 "Pacified North") and
Shuntian Prefecture was established in the area around the city. The Hongwu Emperor was succeeded by his young grandson the
Jianwen Emperor. His attempts to rein in the fiefs of his powerful uncles provoked the
Jingnan Rebellion and ultimately his usurpation by his uncle, the
Prince of Yan. Yan's powerbase lay in Shuntian and he quickly resolved to move his capital north from Yingtian (
Nanjing) to the ruins at Beiping. He shortened the northern boundaries of the city and added a new and separately walled southern district. Upon the southern extension of the
Taiye Lake (the present Nanhai), the raising of
Wansui Hill over Yuan ruins, and the completion of the
Forbidden City to its south, he declared the city his northern capital
Beijing. With
one brief interruption, it has borne the name ever since. == Legacy ==