Hongcun is known as rhe “cow-shaped village” since the pond is shaped like a
cow’s belly and the dyke looks like one of the cow’s legs. More than
800 years old, the village was first constructed during the Song Dynasty
(960-1279). The village now boasts 158 residential buildings that date
back to the Ming (1368-1644)and Qing (1644-1911) dynasties. Nearly 140
are still in good shape. Although new buildings account for 30 per cent
of the village’s total area, they are either smartly concealed or far
removed from the aged ones. Some villagers have already moved out of
their ancestral jomes to make way for tourists. Others still live there
and open parts of their homes to visitors. Local authorities have bought
ancient homes from owners who prefer to move into new ones. And local
authorities only allow villagers to rebuild their houses nearby the village,
so that they don’t overshadow the ancient ones. Before Mt. Huangshan
became a city in 1987, it had no air or rail links to the outside world;
the nearest city was hours away. From their imposing look to delicate ornamental details like woodcarvings
on window frames and banisters, the buildings feature fine workmanship
that is hard to find today. This area was free from gunfire for hundreds
of years. The Japanese aggressors didn’t come here.
Hongcun, like Xidi, is a paradise for architects. Judging
from the general layout of the villages, Xide is meant to resemble a
sailing boat. The Hui School architecture
is depicted in the fancy architectural omaments. The concept behind Hui architecture
is far more intricate than what the visitors have learned about saw-tooth,
which local people call “horse-head,” and fire gables, which local people
name “fish-belly”
beams. Stunning delicate woodcarvings were engraved on the beams above the
front lounge of the Chenzhi Hall, the house of Qing Dynasty (1644-1911)
salt dealer
Wang Dinggui in Hongcun Village. One depicts dozens of playful children celebrating
the Lantern Festival by setting off firecrackers, beating drums and gongs or
blowing trumpets. Another portrays dozens officials playing stringed musical
instruments, painting or doing calligraphy at four tables. Barbers and tea
servants are shown working behind them. The memorial archway—built in
1578 and dedicated
to Hu Wenguang, a Xidi native who became
a high official of the Ming Dynasty—is a masterpiece of stone carving. The best
brick carving ever in Xiyuan, or west garden, at the house of another prominent
Ming-dynasty official from Xidi. The pine, bamboo, plum blossom and rocks look
real. The 13 stone pillars on the north end of the pond are said to be the guardians
of the village. Behind them is Lexu Hall. It is the ancestral temple of the Wang
family, the first residents who formed the village in 1131. No wonder UNESCO
World Cultural Heritage Committee added both Hongcun and Xidi to the World Heritage
List in 2000.
Hong Village is laid out in the shape of an ox, with the
higher end of the village—the Leigang Mountain—resembling an ox head.
Centuries-old trees in
the mountain tower
to the sky just like ox horns. Hundreds of well-preserved ancient houses
spread from east to west like the body of an ox. Another attraction of
the village
lies in its water supply system, which had been used for hundreds of years.
Small
and crisscrossing waterways link various households. Streams originating
to the northwest of the village flow across the area through waterways.
Local
people
describe the 1,000-metre long waterways as “the ox intestines.” The Moon
Pond and the Nanhu Lake were formed by the streams and took the shape
of the ox
stomach. Villagers built four bridges over the streams, which are said to
look like ox
hoofs. The effective water supply system has survived two fires and was completed
bu generations of villagers. The waterways were like the reins of the village,
deciding the pulse of its daily life. Villagers grow flowers
in the courtyards and various kinds of fish teem in the pond.
Welcome
to China2Go, the talking Chinese phrase book for
Windows Mobile Pocket PC and Palm OS. Featuring crystal clear voice recorded
by a real person, this product is a great travel companion and an ideal
tool to learn Chinese! With our cutting edge voice compression technology,
this product includes more than 1000 phrases, their Chinese translation,
and the voice in only a few megabytes.
1913 information sides over China in German as well as 1029 sides in English.
There has been this internet page to the China topic for 2553 days
The contents of this internet page (texts, pictures and graphics) as well as
its composition are subject to the copyright. Any use without a written
consent is forbidden. Only writing arcades (no photos or graphics)
from the free encyclopedia Wikipedia, this are excepted from it stand
under the GNU license for a free documentation.