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Is Li Qingyun General Cemetery a cultural relic protection?
General Cemetery, Li Qingyun belongs to cultural relics, but it has not completed the approval and review procedures of "cultural relics protection units".

Li Qingyun General Cemetery is located about 1 10 m south of the office building of Guangdong Road Education Bureau, and about1/kloc-0 m west of Guangdong Road. The owner of the tomb was General Li Qingyun, deputy commander of the Longmen Association Navy in the late Qing Dynasty, who died in early March of the first year of the Republic of China (19 12). General Li is a native of Jiaying County (now Meizhou City), Guangdong Province. When he was young, he started a small business with his sister and later joined the army. In Qinzhou Longmen Guild, he served as deputy commander, under the general company commander, and was in charge of the military affairs of the Guild.

General Li Cemetery is located in the northwest and faces the southeast. It consists of three parts: the grave, the back soil and the stable, and it is made of concrete. On both sides of the tombstone, there is a couplet: on the left, the couplet reads: "Longmen Weiye"; The bottom line on the right is: "Ma Bin likes Rong Feng". In the middle of the tombstone is a square stone tablet, 80 cm high and 80 cm wide. On the square stone tablet, there are seven lines of words in a straight book, and a couplet is carved on each side of the stone tablet. The couplet on the left reads: "Cowpea is immortal"; The link at the bottom on the right is: "A good city will last forever". The meaning of this couplet is: "if all future generations live a rich life, the sacrifice for future generations will flourish;" General Li's achievements will remain in the beautiful North Sea forever. There is an inscription in the middle of the stone tablet: "The tomb of Li Fujun, a military commander who was given fortitude by the Qing emperor."

In the 15th year of Guangxu (1889), Li Qingyun was awarded a military commander and a second-class military attache by the emperor. The front of the official uniform is embroidered with a "lion" pattern, and the official hat is decorated with a coral top. On the two horse stakes, there is an elegiac couplet engraved, which reads: "Loyal bones make a good city, mountains and rivers add color, and the performance is clear. Today, I went by whale "; The bottom line is: "The general will live in embroidered soil, and all the plants and trees know the soldiers, and the shape will be auspicious. He should become a crane next year. "

General Li Qingyun has a son, Jinrong Li. Jinrong Li died before his father Li Qingyun. There are two sons, Li and Li.

About 30 meters northwest of General Cemetery, Li Qingyun, there is the tomb of Mrs. Erpin in the late Qing Dynasty. The owner of the tomb was the third wife of General Li Qingyun, a second-class official in the late Qing Dynasty. She died in the second year of the Republic of China (19 13), the year after General Li's death. Mrs. Erpin's tomb consists of two parts: the tomb and the earth. The tomb circle is semi-oval, from northwest to southeast, and the direction of the tomb is the same as that of her husband, General Li. General Li Qingyun's first two wives had no boys, and only the third wife gave birth to a boy, Jinrong Li, so the third wife was established as the first wife. In the 15th year of Guangxu (1889), the emperor only granted the third wife as the second wife.

General Li, foreigner, buried in Beihai, second-class officer. This cemetery has certain historical and humanistic value.

Article 13 of the Law of People's Republic of China (PRC) on the Protection of Cultural Relics stipulates that:

The State Council cultural relics administrative departments in the provincial, municipal and county-level cultural relics protection units, choose to have great historical, artistic and scientific value identified as national key cultural relics protection units, or directly identified as national key cultural relics protection units, reported to the State Council for approval and promulgation.

Provincial cultural relics protection units shall be approved and promulgated by the people's governments of provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities directly under the Central Government and reported to the State Council for the record.

City and county cultural relics protection units shall be approved and promulgated by the people's governments of cities, autonomous prefectures and counties divided into districts respectively, and reported to the people's governments of provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities directly under the Central Government for the record.

Immovable cultural relics that have not been approved for publication as cultural relics protection units shall be registered and published by the cultural relics administrative department of the people's government at the county level.