




Palace Museum of The Manchurian Regime
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The Museum of the Imperial Palace of "Manchukuo" is a cultural tourism landmark in Changchun City, combining the dual attributes of "museum + scenic spot." It is currently a national first-class museum, a national key cultural relics protection unit, one of the first batch of national AAAAA-level tourist attractions, a national patriotism education demonstration base, a national research and practice education base for primary and secondary schools, one of the national "most innovative museums," and the most influential project unit of the International Best Heritage Utilization Organization Conference.
The Museum of the Imperial Palace of "Manchukuo" is located at No. 5 Guangfu North Road, Kuancheng District, Changchun City, Jilin Province. Its predecessor was the Changchun Salt Warehouse in the late Qing Dynasty, and in the early Republic of China, it was the official residence of the Jilin-Heilongjiang Salt Administration Bureau, which managed salt affairs in the two provinces. From 1932 to 1945, it served as the imperial residence of Puyi, the puppet emperor of "Manchukuo." In 1962, it became the Exhibition Hall of Imperialist Aggression in Northeast China and the Exhibition Hall of the Puppet Imperial Palace. In 2000, it was officially renamed the Museum of the Imperial Palace of "Manchukuo" and became an important site for patriotic education.
In recent years, with the vision of "becoming a leader in innovative operations for Chinese museums + scenic spots," the Museum of the Imperial Palace of "Manchukuo" has achieved leapfrog development in various businesses and an overall improvement in its comprehensive operations through strategies such as academic establishment, creative prosperity, innovative strengthening, and open sharing. The museum is composed of six functional areas: the imperial core area, the Exhibition Hall of the History of Northeast China's Occupation, the Museum's Eye Art Palace, the M+ Creative Block, the interactive experience area, and the office area.
The Museum of the Imperial Palace of "Manchukuo" currently houses 39 original displays of the "Manchukuo" imperial palace, including Jixi Building, Qinmin Building, and Tongde Hall, as well as 4 large basic exhibitions and 12 special exhibitions. It has collected over 73,000 pieces of art treasures, including a large number of "Manchukuo" imperial palace cultural relics, modern Japanese cultural relics, modern Northeast cultural relics, folk cultural relics, and representative modern and contemporary calligraphy, paintings, sculptures, and works by intangible cultural heritage inheritors.