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Palace, the first to enjoy a variety of architectural art; watch the precious cultural relics on display in the indoor. A large quantity of precious cultural relics of the Palace Museum, according to statistics, a total of as many as 1,052,653, collectively referred to as the relics of one million, accounting for the total number of National Heritage, 1/6. As of December 31, 2005, the Chinese cultural system of Antiquities Collections in a heritage of the unit holdings total number of 109,197, now all in the National Heritage Board filing the record. Collection units in the country to save a heritage of 1330, the National Palace Museum in 8273 (set) topped the list, and received a lot of unique national treasure. The Forbidden City palace, the establishment of a comprehensive history of the Museum of Art, Painting Gallery, the classification of Ceramics Museum, Bronze Museum, Art Museum of the Ming and Qing Dynasties, engraved Museum, Toy Museum, the four treasures of the Museum, the plaything Museum, museum treasures, watches Museum and clear on behalf of the court judgments heritage exhibition, a collection of a large number of ancient art, is the richest collection of cultural relics in China's museums.

Tribute gifts refer to local specialties, decorative accessories, scholar's studio items, and exotic products submitted by major Cantonese officials who had close connections to the Qing imperial family from 1644 to 1911.
  According to the Lists of Goods Presented to the Palace (Gongzhong jindan) and Tribute Archive (Gong dang), which comprise more than ten thousands volumes and are kept in the First Historical Archives of China, Cantonese officials sent countless goods to the Qing emperors, empresses, and empress dowagers over nearly three hundred years from the Kangxi reign (1661-1722) to the Xuantong reign (1898-1911). The tributes range from cloisonné enamel ware, clocks, watches, astronomic instrument, ivory products, coconut carvings, to potted artificial landscape, furniture, duan inkstones, incense, and imported cigarettes. For various reasons - including consumption by the imperial family, rewards to princes, aristocrats, and foreign envoys, natural damage, and theft, smuggling, and artificial destruction - the tributes that survive constitute only a tiny portion of the whole. A rough estimate shows that the extant tributes from Guangdong Province in the Palace Museum are no more than ten thousand and in fewer categories than are listed in the Lists of Goods Presented to the Palace. The tribute goods shown in this online exhibition, although not large in number nor various in kind, are selected from the surviving tribute in the imperial palace and can epitomize those presented hundreds of years ago. These tributes give an idea of the economy, culture, folk art, and handicraft industries of Guangdong, and the prosperous external trade of the province. Our online viewers will appreciate the significant status of Cantonese decorative crafts in China's arts and crafts history.