TRÀ CUNG ĐÌNH: Trà Thảo mộc dưỡng sinh là dạng Phương trà bao gồm một hay nhiều loại thảo dược bào chế và sử dụng giống như trà uống hàng ngày.
Dịch vụ thuyết minh tự động (Audio guide) là ứng dụng công nghệ điện tử hỗ trợ tự động hóa việc thuyết minh cho khách tham quan, nhất là khách lẻ quốc tế và khách sử dụng ngôn ngữ hiếm.
Những hình ảnh của kinh thành thời Nguyễn được hiện ra đầy đủ, rõ nét sinh động cùng với những hoạt động, nghi thức hàng ngày trong hoàng cung hàng trăm năm trước.
Bên trong Hoàng cung Huế có tổ chức chụp ảnh lưu niệm cho du khách tham quan dưới trang phục thái thượng hoàng, vua, hoàng hậu, công chúa, hoàng tử và cung phi.
Để tạo điều kiện cho du khách có cơ hội tham quan khu vực xung quanh Đại Nội và tất cả các điểm du lịch bên trong Đại Nội mà không mất nhiều thời gian.
Du khách có thể liên hệ trực tiếp để đăng ký chương trình tham quan có hướng dẫn đi cùng, du khách có thể liên hệ hướng dẫn ngay tại các điểm di tích.
Exactly 100 years ago, by the canal of An Cuu, commoners were intrigued by the construction of an imposing mansion built in an outlandish style in the Imperial City. That mansion was An Dinh Residence, the secluded residence of Emperor Khai Dinh. Located on the southern bank of the Huong River, An Dinh Residence is a special landmark, built in a neoclassical style that blends Western and Asian elements.
An Dinh Residence was built on the extended foundations of An Dinh Pavilion, which the court granted to Prince Nguyen Phuoc Buu Dao, son of Emperor Dong Khanh, in 1902. The Nguyen Court dictated that princes and princesses would receive private mansions upon marrying. As a result, at the height of the Hue Imperial City, there were hundreds of imperial pavilions of all sizes. An Dinh Pavilion was not very large, and constructed in the traditional Hue style with beams, artificial mountains, a partition and a garden. In 1916, Prince Buu Dao was proclaimed Emperor Khai Dinh. Using his own funds the emperor bought more land and extended his residence to over 23,400sqm, then constructed An Dinh Palace in a new architectural style.
An Dinh Palace is located on the northern bank of the An Cuu Canal, facing south. On the right lies the Temple of Prince Kien Thai, who sired three Nguyen Dynasty emperors: Ham Nghi, Kien Phuc and Dong Khanh. To the left stands the External Hall. Elements were laid out on a vertical axis, including the main entrance gate, Trung Lap Titular Temple, Khai Tuong Pavilion, Cuu Tu Dai Theater and other related and lesser structures. All structures were built of iron, steel, concrete and floral tiles imported from France, but decorated with traditional Hue patterns and motifs, such as dragons, qilins, tortoises, phoenixes, the Eight Fairies and the Four Seasons, etc. An Dinh Residence featured a wealth of ceramic mosaics on the main entrance gate, Trung Lap Titular Temple and Cuu Tu Dai Theater. Indeed, the emperor was dubbed “the king of mosaics”.
The palace’s main entrance gate is located in the center of the southern side. Its pillars and roofs are decorated with numerous reliefs and Chinese parallel sentences crafted from mosaics. The effect is stunning.
Located right behind the main gate, Trung Lap Titular Temple is an adorable octagonal titular temple built on a two-story pedestal. Its roof is covered with overlapping tiles and divided into two layers. The lower layer is octagonal and the upper one rectangular. Its gables are adorned with reliefs of 12 dragons soaring in four directions. Inside the titular temple stands a bronze statue of Emperor Khai Dinh in martial dress, unveiled in July 1924, in the run-up to the emperor’s 40th birthday.
In stark contrast to the two frontal structures, Khai Tuong Pavilion is a colossal building modeled after a medieval European castle. Spanning 745sqm, the pavilion comprises three stories and 22 rooms, including seven rooms on the ground floor, mainly used for guest reception; eight residential rooms on the second floor; and seven rooms on the top floor, mainly for religious uses. Khai Tuong Pavilion stands out thanks to the decorative art on its interior walls and the reliefs on its exterior. Notable works include six murals portraying the five royal mausoleums of Gia Long, Minh Mang, Thieu Tri, Tu Duc and Dong Khanh. Two paintings depict the Mausoleum of Dong Khanh, who was Emperor Khai Dinh’s father.
While the beautifully decorated Cuu Tu Dai Theater was destroyed in 1947, the rest of An Dinh Palace remains well-preserved. At the beginning of this century, the palace was properly renovated thanks to a project funded by the Federal Republic of Germany. The interior was also studied and laid out as it was at the end of the Nguyen Dynasty, allowing visitors to imagine Emperor Khai Dinh, Emperor Bao Dai, Prince Bao Long, Empress Nam Phuong, and Empress Dowager Doan Huy (Madam Tu Cung) in this magnificent space.