142 1 year (in the 19th year of Yongle), when Judy in Ming Taizu built the Jing Palace, she converted it into a country altar according to the system of "living with her ancestors and living with her neighbors". This is the place where the Ming and Qing emperors sacrificed to the land gods and the valley gods.
19 13 The government of the Republic of China took over the national altar and began to raise donations.
19 14, under the auspices of Zhu Qiqian, the chief interior minister of Beiyang government, Shejitan was opened to the public as a park, formerly known as Central Park, which was the first public garden in Beijing at that time and one of the earliest royal gardens in Beijing.
1914 10 June10 Shejitan is open to ordinary people. Before the opening of the park, a large-scale renovation was carried out in a short time, the main entrance facing Chang 'an Avenue was opened, and the wall of Dongtan Gate was cut open to make it look like the Moon Gate.
After 19 15, ponds, stacked stones and other buildings were added in the park, and the halberd gate of the social altar was also changed into a main hall. 1925, Dr. Sun Yat-sen's coffin was parked in the worship hall in the garden.
1925 After the death of Dr. Sun Yat-sen, the coffin was parked in the Garden Temple (now Zhongshan Hall) for a public sacrifice.
1928, the body of Dr. Sun Yat-sen was parked here after his death. In memory of Dr. Sun Yat-sen, He Qigong, then the special mayor of Beiping under Feng Yuxiang, and other patriots renamed the park Zhongshan Park. After it was rebuilt into the Central Park, in addition to retaining the national altar, it successively built pine and cypress pavilions, epigrams pavilions, Fanghui Garden and other landscapes, and also moved Xili Pavilion, Lanting Eight-Pillar Pavilion, Defending Peace Square, Hebei Daming Ancient Temple Song Dynasty stone chambers into the park, and many famous stones of the Qing Palace were also placed in the park.
1937 After the Japanese occupied Beiping, it was changed to Beiping Park, and 10 months later it was changed to Central Park.
1945 After the victory of the Anti-Japanese War, the name of Zhongshan Park was restored, which is still in use today.
1988 Zhongshan park was designated as a national key cultural relics protection unit by the State Council, China.