Showing posts with label China 中国. Show all posts
Showing posts with label China 中国. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

2010-05-18 CHINA from Howard Tan(Malaysia) #2nd


... 水巷(甪直)
/ the water alley in LuZhi
一个与世无争的良地
the second card sent by a best friend Howard Tan during his trip to China... the natural of it is definetly attract deeply to who like fresh environment 

Thanks for Best Friend Howard Tan
Received: MAY 2010




甪直(与鹿直同音),难识的地名,难忘的水乡。一个作为苏沪之间的水乡古镇,她穿越了2500多年的历史风雨,历经了苍桑的岁月……至今依旧保留了她古朴醇正的风貌,吸引了广大的中外游客,令人留连往返。
 
甪直有着优越的地理位置,临于苏州城东18公里,距上海58公里,从苏沪机场路可直达苏州市区和上海虹桥机场;经苏州工业园区和甪昆公路可直转沪宁高速、苏嘉杭高速、312国道或318国道;水路航道更是四通八达,交通极为便利。
古镇乡有很多有名的风味小吃,其中尤以甫里鸭甫里蹄享于全国;水乡独有的吴东妇女服饰是古镇最亮丽的一道风景线。

甪直与苏州同龄,她萌动于春秋,绵延于两汉,繁华于魏晋,勃发于明清。甪直拥有广袤的沃野和湖泊,自古以来以农业发达著称;古镇保留了从春秋到清代以来的众多名胜古迹,尤其是各个时代、各种式样的古桥为多;古镇居民还保留了几百年前古老生活的意韵、淳朴、宁静和幽雅……

悠久的历史,孕育了古镇独特的文化氛围和风土人情,让甪直成为浮华背后的乐土。
背上行囊去甪直,放松心情、涤荡心灵、净化灵魂;让思绪随小桥流水而来,飘过小巷古宅,渐渐远去……

甪端广场
在古镇西口,穿过一座横额上写着甪直古镇的高大石牌楼再向东前行,穿过甪直桥,迎面可见一座由石栏护围的厂雕,那便是甪直镇标;一头造型独特的独角神 ——甪端。据《宋书·符瑞志》中说,他有两大特异功能,一是速度飞快,能日行一万八千里;二是信息灵通。他懂四方语言,了解远方情况。甪直人选他作为镇 标,其意义也就不言而喻了。

保圣寺
保圣寺是江南一座著名的千年古刹,内藏出自唐代塑圣杨惠之之手的罗汉塑壁艺术瑰宝,是中国首批全国重点文物保护单位之一。
保圣圭原名保圣教寺,是创建于梁天监二年(公元503年)。梁武帝萧衍笃佛教,一做皇帝就大兴寺庙。保圣教寺即是南朝四百八十寺之一。于唐会昌五年 (公元845年)遭了殃,至北宋大中祥符六年(公元1013年)再次重建。最盛时据称殿宇5000多间,僧众千人,范围达半个镇。便但到了元未又再衰颓。 明成化二十二年(公元1487年)重新振兴,当时规模有200多间建筑,保持了一流寺庙的格局,时称江南四大寺院之一,堪与杭州灵隐寺媲美。
现在的保圣寺山门是按乾隆年间的原貌重修起来的。寺内尚存:九罗汉圣迹、各代铜镜展览、青石经幢、铁钟、千年古银杏、百年枸杞等宝贵历史遗物。

2010-05-18 CHINA from Howard Tan(Malaysia) #1st

... 帆船 / SailBoat

Lately upload this beautiful sunset card which sent by a best friend Howard Tan during his trip to China... This view seems like back to the Dynasty QING.. hehe... Bird stamps show typical chinese styles of design... I love it...


Thanks for Best Friend Howard Tan
Received: MAY 2010

Friday, February 4, 2011

CN-245970 中国上海 CHINA from DuKang~

~ 中国上海 / ShangHai, China ~ (CN-245970)
“世界第一拱桥”/ The Longest Suspension Bridge in the World
                                                                               Received August 2010
Thanks for  Teacher DuKang !!!


Lupu Bridge (simplified Chinese: 卢浦大桥站; traditional Chinese: 盧浦大橋站; pinyin: Lúpǔ Dàqiáo Zhàn) is the name of a station on Line 13 of the Shanghai Metro.
The station is located inside the Expo 2010 zone. It is part of the first phase of Line 13 (also known as the EXPO phase) and is one of the stations that is used by Expo 2010 ticket holders. It was open for six months, between April 20 and November 1 in 2010 to serve Expo visitors. It is now closed for reconstruction.

Friday, January 28, 2011

CN-201978 中国重庆 CHINA from XuXiao


~ 重庆 Chong Qin, 中国 China ~ (CN-201978)

Woow!!! definitely my favourite UNESCO card 秦朝兵马俑 Qin Dynasty's Terracotta Warriors...
Is nice to see the Chinese Phoenix stamps attached this card... I like it...         Received May 2010

Thanks for XuXiao!!

The Terracotta Army (simplified Chinese: 兵马俑; traditional Chinese: 兵馬俑; pinyin: bīngmǎ yǒng; literally "soldier and horse funerary statues") or the "Terra Cotta Warriors and Horses", is a collection of terracotta sculptures depicting the armies of Qin Shi Huang 秦始皇, the First Emperor of China.

The figures, dating from 210 BC, were discovered in 1974 by some local farmers in Lintong District, Xi'an, Shaanxi province, near the Mausoleum of the First Qin Emperor (Chinese: 秦始皇陵; pinyin: Qín Shǐhuáng Ling).

The figures vary in height 1.83–1.95 metres (6 ft 0 in–6 ft 5 in), according to their roles, with the tallest being the generals. The figures include warriors, chariots, horses, officials, acrobats, strongmen and musicians. Current estimates are that in the three pits containing the Terracotta Army there were over 8,000 soldiers, 130 chariots with 520 horses and 150 cavalry horses, the majority of which are still buried in the pits.

Background
The Terracotta Army was discovered in the spring of 1974 in the eastern suburbs of Xi'an, Shaanxi Province by a group of farmers who were digging a water well 1.5 miles (2.4 km) east of Mount Li. The region around the mountain was riddled with underground springs and watercourses. In 195 B.C., Liu Bang — the first emperor of the dynasty that followed the Qin — had ordered that 'twenty households' should move to the site of the mausoleum of the First Emperor of Qin (Qin Shi Huang, "shi huang" means the first emperor) to watch over the tomb. To this day, twenty villages sit in the immediate vicinity of the mausoleum, one of them the hamlet where the Yang family lived; the terracotta army may have been rediscovered by the direct descendants of the people left to guard it. For centuries, there were reports of pieces of terracotta figures and fragments of the Qin necropolis — roofing tiles, bricks, and chunks of masonry — having been occasionally dug up in the area.

This most recent discovery prompted archaeologists to investigate. The Terracotta Army is a form of funerary art buried with the First Emperor of Qin in 210-209 BC. The Army's purpose was to help rule another empire with Qin Shi Huang in the afterlife. Consequently, they are also sometimes referred to as "Qin's Armies." The material to make the terracotta warriors originated on Mount Lishan. In addition to the warriors, an entire man-made necropolis for the emperor has been excavated. Up to 5 metres (16 feet) of reddish, sandy soil had accumulated over the site in the centuries following its construction, but archaeologists also found evidence of earlier, impromptu discoveries. During the digs at Mount Li, archaeologists found several graves from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, whose diggers had obviously struck terracotta fragments, only to discard them as worthless with the rest of the back-filled soil.

According to historian Sima Qian (145-90 BC), construction of this mausoleum began in 246 BC and involved 700,000 workers. Geographer Li Daoyuan, six centuries after the death of the First Emperor, explained that Mount Li had been chosen as a site for its auspicious geology: it once had a gold mine on its north face and a jade mine on its south face, demonstrating not only its sacred value, but also perhaps how the tunnels had come to be dug in the first place.[4] Qin Shi Huang was 13 when construction began. He specifically stated that no two soldiers were to be made alike, which is most likely why he had construction started at that young age. Sima Qian, in his most famous work, Shiji, completed a century after the mausoleum completion, wrote that the First Emperor was buried with palaces, scenic towers, officials, valuable utensils and "wonderful objects," with 100 rivers fashioned in mercury and above this heavenly bodies below which he wrote were "the features of the earth." Some translations of this passage refer to "models" or "imitations," but he does not use those words.

Recent scientific work at the site has shown high levels of mercury in the soil on and around Mount Lishan, appearing to add credence to Sima Qian's writings. The tomb of Shi Huang Di is under an earthen pyramid 76 metres tall and nearly 350 square metres. The tomb remains unopened, in the hope that it will remain intact. Archeologists are afraid that if they do excavate the tomb, they might damage some of the valuables buried with emperor Qin Shi Huang. Only a portion of the site is presently excavated, and photos and video recordings are prohibited in some areas of the viewing. Only few foreigners, such as Queen Elizabeth II, have been permitted to walk through the pits, side by side to the army.

Qin Shi Huang’s necropolis complex was constructed to serve as an imperial compound or palace. It comprises several offices, halls and other structures and is surrounded by a wall with gateway entrances.

Friday, June 18, 2010

CN-186042 - Victoria (China)

A card with nice sticker, it content plenty of stamps. I like the mail box standing on sunny day and snowy surounde.  
Thanks for Victoria!!

Monday, May 17, 2010

China - Ji Chang Garden 寄畅园


This old PostCard was found in a hardcase bag of my father long time ago, but unfortunately my father couldn't recall how's it came from?!
However it is good to find what's the picture bring to viewer.

Ji Chang Garden is located inside Xihui Park, east side of Hui Shan, east side of western suburban of Wuxi, Jiangsu Province. It's close to Huishan Temple. Jichang Garden is a famed Chinese classical garden in South China, and it was claimed as a national protected location of historical and cultural relics on 13 January 1988. Xiequ Garden (谐趣园) inside the Summer Palace and Guo Ran Da Gong (廓然大公) (or, Double-Crane House 双鹤斋) in Yuanming Yuan in Beijing both imitated Jichang Garden.