"Records of Yuantan Town" contains: "According to legend, four generals died at the end of the Song Dynasty and were buried here. The emperor named them "Shiro Tomb", and there are three existing tombs. Shiro's tomb is in a straight line. The middle burial is 35 meters away from the south burial, 28 meters away from the north burial, 7 meters high in the south burial and 50 meters in the bottom diameter. Nakazuka is 6 meters high and 36 meters in diameter. The north weighs 6 meters and the base is 43 meters in diameter. They are all conical, and the soil is rammed flat. A mound at 0/00 meter north of China/KLOC-was damaged by water conservancy construction at 0/958. At that time, I got a pair of golden pots engraved with words that no one could understand, and then I lost them; At the same time, pottery dogs, chickens and pots were unearthed. There are 15 kinds of rope brick, geometric brick and wedge brick seen today. According to the characteristics of unearthed relics, the age of Shiro's tomb should be in the early Eastern Han Dynasty. 1963 was designated as a cultural relics protection unit by the county. "
It has also been said that in the past, no matter how big the official was, officials passing through Shiro's tomb had to dismount. I don't know which county magistrate passed by Shiro's tomb. After several visits to Shiro's tomb, he said that the tablet cap of Shiro's tomb was old, so he took it off first and replaced it with a new one later. I haven't seen anyone change the hat since it was taken away. Since then, officials passing by here have stopped getting off.
This is a legend and a culture.
Whether the four generals at the end of the Song Dynasty in Shi Yingzu came from Yuantan is impossible to verify.