[2024 Tongcheng Attraction] Travel Guide for Liuchi Alley (Updated Nov)
Historical Sites
Address:
Liuchi Alley, Tongcheng Shi, Anqing Shi, Anhui Sheng, China
Opening times:
Open year round, 24/7Open
Recommended sightseeing time:
1-2 hours
Liuchixia Lane, Confucian Temple, and Longmian Mountain Day Tour.
Liuchixia Lane, Confucian Temple, and Longmian Mountain Day Tour
Liuchixia Lane has been very popular recently. I checked the distance on the map, and it was exactly 100 km. After getting an electric car, I always check the difference between taking the highway and not taking the highway. It takes 2 hours without taking the highway, saving CNY 38 in tolls. Taking the highway is half an hour faster, but I decided not to take the highway. So, I took National Highway 206. The scenery along the way was nice. It was drizzling, and I turned on the natural wind mode of the air conditioner. I bought breakfast on the roadside and arrived at Liuchixia Lane at about 10:40. The parking lot is opposite Liuchixia Lane. The parking fee is very cheap, CNY 3 + 1. I visited the left side first, the Wu family, which looks like the Ming Dynasty style. The house type is very nice. There is an introduction to the highlights of the Wu family in the Ming Dynasty. Most of the pavilions and buildings are modern. I like the building with a patio. Then I visited the Zhang family. I am familiar with the plot of the TV series "Yongzheng Dynasty". Zhang Tingyu is very famous. He is the only Han minister in the Qing Dynasty who was honored in the Imperial Ancestral Temple. The houses of the Wu family and the Zhang family are no longer inhabited by descendants and have been transformed into scenic spots. After the visit, I ate at a nearby restaurant called Maoge Beef Restaurant. It was not a trap, and the food was delicious. After the meal, I took a nap in the car and walked to the nearby Confucian Temple. This is an ancient building dedicated to Confucius. The Dacheng Hall is a mortise and tenon structure, majestic and magnificent. The statue of Confucius is located in the Dacheng Hall. Confucius is in the center, wearing a flat crown and holding a board with the Big Dipper. Facing Confucius, on the left is Mencius and Zeng Shen, and on the right is Yan Hui and Kong Ji (with a "ren" radical). Then there are 12 sages on the left and right. Among the 12 sages, I am familiar with Zilu, Zigong, and Zhu Xi. The others are not familiar to me. They are all loyal followers of Confucius. During the Cultural Revolution, the Dacheng Hall was used as a canteen and survived. Outside the Dacheng Hall, the side rooms on both sides are dedicated to the life stories of the 72 disciples of Confucius in the Spring and Autumn Period. After visiting the Confucian Temple, I planned to go to Longmian Mountain. After arriving at the destination, I didn't know where the road up the mountain was. I asked several local villagers, and they all said that this area was called Longmian Mountain, but there was no road up the mountain. So, I drove a few kilometers along the mountain road and found that the scenery was very ordinary. The 2A scenic spot is probably just like an ordinary park, which is a small regret.
REGINALD BOOTH
Tongcheng Six-Foot Lane
Six-Foot Lane, located in the southwest corner of Tongcheng City, Anhui Province, is 100 meters long and 2 meters wide. It was built during the Kangxi period of the Qing Dynasty (1662-1722). Stone archways stand at both ends of the lane, with the characters for 'courtesy' inscribed on them.
'Thousands of miles of family letters are just for a wall, why not yield another three feet? The Great Wall still stands after thousands of miles, yet the First Emperor of Qin is nowhere to be seen.' This 'Yielding Wall Poem' originates from a historical anecdote of Six-Foot Lane. Historical records show that there was a gap next to the residence of Mr. Zhang Wenduan, which bordered the Wu family's property. The Wu family encroached upon it. Family members sent a letter to the capital, and Mr. Zhang replied with instructions to yield three feet. Upon receiving the letter, the family members withdrew and yielded three feet, and seeing this, the neighbors also yielded three feet, hence the name Six-Foot Lane.
In 1956, Mao Zedong, while meeting with the Soviet ambassador to China, Eugene, quoted a poem: 'The Great Wall still stands after thousands of miles, yet the First Emperor of Qin is nowhere to be seen.' The origin of this poem is related to the 'Six-Foot Lane' in Tongcheng, Anhui.
HealthyEatsDaily
Tongcheng Six-Foot Lane, a harmonious city renowned
Six-Foot Lane, located in the southwest corner of Tongcheng City, Anhui Province, is 100 meters long and 2 meters wide. It was built during the Kangxi period of the Qing Dynasty (1662-1722). Stone archways stand at both ends of the lane, with the word 'courtesy' inscribed on them. 'A thousand miles of letters just for a wall, why not yield another three feet? The Great Wall still stands after thousands of miles, yet the First Emperor of Qin is nowhere to be seen.' This 'Yielding Wall Poem' originates from a historical anecdote of Six-Foot Lane. Historical records show that there was a gap next to the residence of Mr. Zhang Wenduan, which bordered the Wu family's property. The Wu family encroached upon it. Zhang's family sent a letter to the capital, and Mr. Zhang replied with instructions sent back home. Upon reading the letter, the family voluntarily yielded three feet of space. Subsequently, the neighbors, upon seeing this, also yielded three feet, hence the name Six-Foot Lane. During the Kangxi period, Zhang Ying served as the Grand Scholar of the Wenhua Hall and concurrently as the Minister of Rites. His family home in Tongcheng neighbored the Wu family, with an alley between their courtyards for mutual access. Later, when the Wu family wanted to build a new house and occupy this alley, the Zhang family disagreed. The dispute escalated to the local county office. The county official, considering the prestigious status of both families, dared not make a hasty decision. At this point, the Zhang family, in frustration, sent an urgent letter to Zhang Ying, asking him to intervene. After reading the letter, Zhang Ying believed in yielding to neighbors. He wrote four lines in his reply: 'A thousand miles of letters just for a wall, why not yield another three feet? The Great Wall still stands after thousands of miles, yet the First Emperor of Qin is nowhere to be seen.' After reading this, the family understood the message and voluntarily yielded three feet of land. Moved by this gesture, the Wu family also voluntarily yielded three feet of their foundation land, and thus 'Six-Foot Lane' got its name.
CHARLEE HOUSTON
Six Feet Lane
Six Feet Lane, located in the southwest corner of Tongcheng City, Anhui Province, with a total length of 100 meters and a width of 2 meters, was built during the Kangxi period of the Qing Dynasty. Six Feet Lane starts from the west back street lane in the east and reaches Baizitang in the west. The south of the lane is Zhang Ying's prime minister's mansion, and the north of the lane is the Wu family's house. The total length is 100 meters and the width is 2 meters, all paved with cobblestones. The main buildings of "Six Feet Lane" include the lane, the "Courtesy" stone archway on the east side, the "Yide Liufang" stone archway on the west side, leisure square, poetry and painting photo wall, rockery, etc.