Current location - Music Encyclopedia - Today in History - The Myths and Legends of Yongkang Fangyan
The Myths and Legends of Yongkang Fangyan
Yongkang Fangyan Gong Hu Temple is a Gong Hu Temple built in memory of Emperor Gong Hu. He is not a Buddha, not a god, but a man. His surname is Hu, the word is Zheng, and he is from Huku Village, Yongkang. In the second year of Duan Gong (AD 989), Song Taizong was listed as a scholar by Chen Yaomao, and spent 40 years in his official career with remarkable achievements.

In his later years, he still played spare money in Qu and Wu (the jurisdiction is equivalent to Jinhua City and Quzhou City today). After the death of Renzong Baoyuan in the second year (AD 1039), the ancestral village grateful to Dade sent a statue he had read before to the left of Guangci Temple as a souvenir.

Extended data:

Fangyan is a typical Danxia landform area, with strange peaks and rocks, beautiful waterfalls and grotesque caves. It combines majesty, preciseness and the beauty of green hills, and is good at netting rocks and forests. Moreover, it has a long history and rich cultural relics.

Yu Dafu, a writer, wrote in his travel notes: "Before I saw the strange stones in Chinese paintings, they were all wrinkled and magnificent to an incredible extent. When I arrived at Fangyan and looked up at the mountain, I realized that there were still places where the Northern School of the Southern Song Dynasty painted rocks. "

Fangyan has beautiful natural scenery and unique human landscape. Among the tourists, Yan Fang, Danxia and Fengzi came here to pay homage to Emperor Gong Hu, who was both a god and a Buddha, and the incense was enduring. In front of Gong Hu Temple, red candles are bright, cigarettes are around, and prayers are everywhere, forming a colorful Gong Hu culture.

Baidu Encyclopedia-Yongkang Fangyan

Baidu Encyclopedia-Yan Fang