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Yuyuan Gardens, located in the center of the Old City in
Shanghai, China, are considered one of the four finest Chinese
gardens.
The gardens were reportedly
first established in 1559 as a private garden created by Pan
Yunduan, who spent almost 20 years building a garden to please
his father Pan En, a high-ranking official in the Ming Dynasty,
during his father's old age. Over the years, the gardens fell
into disrepair until about 1760 when bought by merchants, then
suffered extensive damage in the 19th century. In 1842, during
the Opium Wars, the British army occupied the Town God Temple
for five days. During the Taiping Rebellion the gardens were
occupied by imperial troops, and damaged again by the Japanese
in 1942. They were repaired by the Shanghai government from
1956-1961, opened to the public in 1961, and declared a national
monument in 1982.
For more information:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuyuan_Gardens
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