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Speak Chinese – Longchuan Hu-Family Ancestral Hall

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Longchuan Hu-Family Ancestral Hall

The Longchuan Hu-Family Ancestral Hall resides in Dakengkou Village, 12 kilometers east of Jixi County in Anhui Province.

The ancestral hall was built in the Song Dynasty (960-1279) and was extensively renovated between 1522 and 1566 during the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). Hence, the hall has many distinct features of Ming architecture.

Sitting in the north and facing south, the hall covers an area of 1,146 square meters. There are seven constructions in three rows, all built on a brick and wooden structure. The hall is magnificent in appearance. Built in the front row is a tall, arched gate with a double-eaved gable and hip
roof. Behind it is a corridor encircled with 12 square, stone columns. The central hall is located in the middle row of constructions with 14 round columns 166 centimeters in diameter and 21 large and small girders. Built in the back row is a two-storied sleeping hall. The girders and columns in
the ancestral hall are all engraved with various patterns of superb craftsmanship, including human figures, birds, beasts, insects and fish. The hall, reputed as the art palace of wooden carvings, is a precious legacy to Anhui School of architecture.

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Chinese Tutor – Kwan-yin Bridge

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Kwan-yin Bridge

Kwan-yin Bridge lies 10 kilometers north of Xingzi County in Jiangxi Province.

Kwan-yin Bridge is a single-arched stone bridge spanning over the Three Gorges and linking the south and the north. Water from the peaks of Lushan Mountain and 99 streams joins into a single, rushing flow that produces big waves and a thunderous sound. The water underneath Kwan-yin Bridge is over
30 to 40 meters deep. The bridge, which leans on the steep cliffs, was built over a gully.

Constructed during the Song Dynasty (960-1279), the Kwan-yin Bridge is 24.4 meters long and 4.10 meters wide. Its roadway is paved with large stones and has stone-carved railings on both sides. The south and north ends of the bridge each have a set of four steps. Paved with seven rectangular
granites, the inner arch is solidly constructed and delicately designed. With the exception of the bridge’s railings, which were added during the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), the structure remains unchanged since the Song Dynasty. It can still withstand daily traffic.

At the south end of the Kwan-yin Bridge is the Sixth Spring under Heaven, and the Kwan-yin Pavilion stands at the north end. Beneath the bridge is the Three Gorges Gully with towering cliffs on both sides. Up along the gully is Yuyuan, a famous scenic spot at Lushan Mountain.

The Kwan-yin Bridge is considered a gem of China’s architectural history due to its grand scale, exquisite and solid construction, as well as the arduous efforts that the project demanded.

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Chinese Tutor – Beizhen Temple

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Beizhen Temple

The Beizhen Temple is located on a slope 2.5 kilometers north of Beizhen County, Liaoning Province.

At the Beizhen Temple people offered sacrifices to the Mountain God of Yiwulu Mountain. An ancestral temple was built at the foot of the mountain during the Jin Dynasty (1115-1234). Stone tablets indicate that Beizhen Temple was rebuilt and expanded between 1421 and 1495 during the Ming Dynasty
(1368-1644).

The large-scale Beizhen Temple is 109 meters wide from east to west and 240 meters long from north to south. Main constructions inside the temple include the Yuxiang Hall, Center Hall, Gengyi Hall, Neixiang Hall and Sleeping Hall, all built on a H-shaped high base. In front of these structures are
a stone memorial archway, mountain gate, Shenma Gate and belfry; in the back are Xianren Rock and the Cuiyun Screen.

The Yuxiang Hall has five rooms containing imperial books and offerings. Behind the Yuxiang Hall is the Big Hall known as the symmetrical center and also the largest construction in the temple. In the Big Hall — a big, wooden construction with black brick walls and a green glazed tile roof — the
imperial family staged sacrificial ceremonies. The hall’s columns and purlins were painted red and contained carved patterns. On the walls are 32 drawings depicting civil and military officials from the Han Dynasty (206BC-220AD) to the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). The figures are portrayed in various
postures and are remarkably true to life.

Behind the Big Hall are the three Gengyi Halls where people changed clothes before participating in sacrificial ceremonies in the Big Hall. At the back of the Gengyi Halls are three Neixiang Halls where the offerings, joss sticks and candles used by local officials were kept. The Sleeping Hall
– the forbidden house of the Mountain God — is located at the back. The large hall was built next to the Big Hall which was enclosed by white stone railings.

A total of 56 stone tablets of the Yuan (1271-1368), Ming and Qing (1644-1911) Dynasties are kept in the temple. Among the tablets, 12 belong to the Yuan Dynasty, 16 to the Ming Dynasty and 28 to the Qing Dynasty. The tablets are very valuable in terms of archaeological study as well as
calligraphy.

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