Current location - Plastic Surgery and Aesthetics Network - Jewelry brand - Where is the Meng Temple in Zoucheng, Shandong?
Where is the Meng Temple in Zoucheng, Shandong?
Mengfu, located in Nanguan, Zoucheng City, also known as Yasheng House, is the place where Mencius' immediate family members live. According to relevant data, it should have been built in the Jin and Yuan Dynasties. After the reconstruction and expansion of the past dynasties, the current Mongolian government covers an area of more than 60 mu, with 7 courtyards in front and back, and 100 buildings, halls, pavilions and rooms. The Mongolian government is bounded by the lobby, with the official residence in front and the inner house behind. The building format is the front hall and the back bedroom. There are a large number of precious cultural relics in Mengfu, such as imperial robes, robes, imperial edicts and imperial edicts, as well as family treasures, antiques, clan files, printed books, ancient books and calligraphy, which are precious materials for studying feudal society, politics, economy and local history. Located in Nanguan, Zoucheng City, the Meng Temple was built in the fourth year of Jingyou, Song Renzong (A.D. 1073), and it was rebuilt and expanded several times in Jin, Yuan, Ming and Qing Dynasties before it reached its present scale. The whole Meng Temple has five courtyards and sixty-four halls, covering an area of more than sixty acres. The main building-the sub-hall is centered, the central axis is north and south, and it is symmetrically arranged left and right. There are three yards ahead and three roads behind. The Confucius Temple is a great hall dedicated to Mencius. According to records, it was rebuilt 38 times in the past dynasties. There are seven halls, which are17m high, nearly 28m wide and 2 1 m deep. They are green glazed tile double cornices, 26 octagonal pillars under the eaves, and shallow carved pterodactyl peony. There are more than 300 stone carvings in the temple, including "Stone Carvings on Qin Dynasty", "Stone Carvings on Laizihou in Western Han Dynasty" and "Su Yuhua Epitaph" in Ou Yangxun in Tang Dynasty.