Nine Altars and Eight Temples
The Nine Altars and Eight Temples refer to 17 sites in Beijing that played a significant roles in imperial ritual and worship under the Qing dynasty, some of them going back to earlier periods of the history of Beijing. As some of the altars are clustered in the same locations, the same ritual venues are occasionally referred to as only "Five Altars and Eight Temples".
Nine Altars
- Circular Mound Altar within the Temple of Heaven, for sacrifices to Tian on the winter solstice
- Altar of the Sun outside the city walls east of Chaoyangmen, for worship of the sun on the March equinox
- Altar of the Earth also known as the Fangzetan, outside the city walls north of Andingmen, for sacrifices on the summer solstice
- Altar of the Moon, outside the city walls west of Fuchengmen, for worship on the September equinox
- Hall of Prayer for Good Harvests north of the Circular Mound Altar within the Temple of Heaven, for worship on the first Xin day of the first lunar month
- Altar of Agriculture in present-day Temple of Agriculture Park, for worship on the second day of the third month of spring
- Altar of Tai Sui also in the Temple of Agriculture Park, for worship on auspicious days in the first ten days of the first lunar month and the last ten days of the twelfth lunar month
- Altar of the First Silkworm Goddess in present-day Beihai Park, for worship of Leizu on the fourth day of the second month of spring
- Altar of Earth and Grain in present-day Zhongshan Park southwest of the Forbidden City
Eight Temples
- Imperial Ancestral Temple in present-day Working People's Cultural Palace southeast of the Forbidden City
- within the Forbidden City
- within the Forbidden City
- Hall of Longevity in present-day Jingshan Park north of the Forbidden City
- within the city walls west of the Imperial City
- Tangzi, a shamanic ritual site of the House of Aisin-Gioro that stood on the location of present-day Beijing Hotel until demolition in the 20th century
- Palace of Peace and Harmony also known as the Beijing Lama Temple, Tibetan Buddhist complex within the city walls north of the Imperial City
- Temple of Confucius immediately west of the Lama Temple