
7 WONDERS
Everything you should know about the 7 wonders of the world
7 Ancient Wonders
7 Medeivel Wonders
7 Modern Wonders
Forgotten Modern Wonders
Forgotten Medeival Wonders
7 Natural Wonders










































Location:
Nanjing, China, out on the
banks of the Yangtze.
History of Porcelain Tower:
The people of China called
it Bao'ensi, the "Temple of Gratitude." European visitors who beheld the
structure called it the Porcelain Tower of Nanjing and labeled it one of the
wonders of the world. But warfare and subsequent destruction overtook it in the
19th century, and this remarkable structure was almost lost to history,
virtually forgotten by the world.
Still, for many people who had known the tower firsthand, it was a sublimely elegant example of a Buddhist pagoda. "The best contrived and noblest structure of all the East," wrote Le Comte, the French mathematician who had made a visit to China in the early 19th century.
Description of Porcelain
From an octagonal base
about 97 feet in diameter, the tower's nine stories rose pyramidally to a height
of about 260 feet. According to information obtained by an American missionary
who journeyed to Nanjing in 1852, the original plan for the tower had called for
13 stories and a total height of about 330 feet. Although those ambitious
dimensions were never realized, the smaller size made little difference, because
size was not what made the structure so memorable for visitors.
The brilliant white porcelain bricks that faced the tower were what made it so unforgettable. By day, the bricks glittered in the sun, and at night they were illuminated by perhaps as many as 140 lamps hanging around the exterior of the pagoda. Worked into the porcelain panels were colorful stoneware tiles with green, yellow, white, and brown glazes forming images of animals, landscapes, flowers, and bamboo.
Sponsored by: office jokes and world famous personThe Porcelain Tower
