(49) Residence of the Grand Secretary, Wang Wen-shao.
(50) Residence of Yang Li-shan, the President of the Board of Revenue, executed by order of Prince Tuan.
(51) Residence of Duke Lan, the Boxer leader. At present occupied by Prince Pu Chün, the deposed Heir to the Throne and a most notorious reprobate.
(52) Tzŭ Ning Kung, or Palace of Maternal Tranquillity, where the Empress Dowager Tzŭ An resided during most of the years of the Co-Regency.
(53) Chang Ch’un Kung, or Palace of Perpetual Spring, where Tzŭ Hsi resided during the reign of T’ung-Chih.
(54) Residence of the actors engaged for Palace performances.
(55) The Nei Wu Fu, or Imperial Household Department Offices.
(56) The Taoist Temple (Ta Kao Tien), where the Emperor prays for rain or snow.
(57), (58) In these two Palaces resided the chief Imperial concubines. After Tzŭ Hsi’s resumption of the Regency in 1898, Kuang Hsü and His Consort occupied small apartments at the back of her Palace, on the brief visits of the Court to the Forbidden City.
(59) Chung Ho Tien, or Throne Hall of Permanent Harmony. Here H.M. Kuang Hsü was arrested in September 1898 and taken away to confinement in the “Ocean Terrace.”