A Visit to Beijing and the Forbidden City

From the collection of

Screen Archive South East at the University of Brighton
Screen Archive South East at the University of Brighton collects, preserves, catalogues and provides public access to its collection of films and magic lantern slides. The collection charts the rise of screen culture in the region and the nation and captures many aspects of life, work and creativity in the South East from the late 19th century to the present day. It is available for research, screenings, creative re-use and commercial access.

A Visit to Beijing and the Forbidden City


Beijing's Forbidden City is the star attraction in this film from the late 1920s, featuring historic buildings, the Lion's Gate and an early panorama across the city.

This short film features a Forbidden City surprisingly devoid of visitors, apart from a fur-clad Charlotte Simpson, who appears in many of the scenes. Both the Inner and Outer Courts within the Hall of Supreme Harmony can be seen as well as various views of the Lion's Gate. The film ends with a panoramic view across Beijing, taken from the Simpson's balcony, while below a semi-circle of rickshaws await their drivers who are busy examining a motorcar.

William Simpson, who made this film, worked for the Bradford Dyers Association in Shanghai, at Number 1, The Bund. His wife Charlotte was born in China's Lushan mountains and she married William, who originally came from Bradford, in Shanghai's St Ignatius Roman Catholic Cathedral. The couple left Shanghai before the city was overrun by the Japanese Army and by 1938 had left China for good. The few visitors to the Forbidden City, as seen in this film, contrasts sharply with the Chinese government's announcement in April 2014, that it intended to limit the number of visitors to the complex, which currently stands at 7 million visitors per year.


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