Lìdài Dìwáng Miào shǐzhōng yǐ sān huáng wǔ dì wèi jìsì zhōngxīn, tǐxiàn le sān huáng wǔ dì chónggāo de zǔxiān dìwèi, miào zhōng rù sì rénwù bùduàn zēngduō, dào qīng Qián Lóng shíqī, zài jǐng Dé chóng shèng dà diàn nèi gòngfèng sān huáng wǔ dì hé lìdài kāi guó dìwáng, shǒuyè dìwáng 188 rén de páiwèi, zài dōng, Xī pèi diàn gòngfèng lìdài wénchén wǔjiàng 79 rén de páiwèi.
From beginning to end the Temple of Ancient Monarchs used the three sovereigns and five emperors at its center of its religious ceremonies to reflect the majesty and lofty position of three sovereigns and five emperors as ancestors. The people of prestige visiting the temple continually increased until the time of the Qing Emperor Qian Long. Inside the sacred and majestic Great Hall are 188 memorial tablets for the three sovereigns and five emperors and successive generations of emperors that founded states, and to the east and west sides are 79 memorial tablets for successive generations of court officials and military leaders.