The inner garden village where Baishi Yunju is located was originally the "Han Imperial Sukuyuan" and was part of the upper forest garden of the Han Dynasty. In the third year of the founding of the Han Dynasty, Emperor Liu Che expanded the Han Dynasty Royal Shanglin Garden on the basis of the Shanglin Garden of the Qin Dynasty, with a magnificent scale and a hundred miles in length, with 5 plateaus, 8 waters, 11 pools, 12 palaces, 25 views and 36 gardens, of which this place is one of the 36 gardens, "Imperial Suyuan". In the twenty-first year of Tang Zhenguan, Emperor Taizong of Tang, Li Shimin, ordered Yan Lide to re-expand and repair the original Taihe Palace, and named it Cuiwei Palace. And surrounded by a large foothill north of Cuiwei Palace to form the Royal Forbidden Garden, called "Inner Garden", also known as Cuiwei Palace Lower Garden.
The village was originally related to the imperial temple and theater building, which was changed to a private school during the Republic of China, and after liberation, it was an elementary school, with rich piers, curved cornices, carved plant and animal patterns, thick mountain flowers at the tip of the mountain, and flower-shaped iron nails fixed between the Bofeng bricks; There is also an immovable cultural relic An Clan Ancestral Hall, which is used as a Buddhist hall.
The current Neiyuan Village is an important tourist and leisure resort in the northern foothills of the Qinling Mountains, and an important heritage of Chang'an's history and southern culture.