Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel accommodation - Can I buy a stall ring in the night market?

Can I buy a stall ring in the night market?

You can buy a stall ring at the night market.

Night markets appeared in big cities in the late Tang Dynasty. During the Song Dynasty and the Northern Song Dynasty, the rulers explicitly allowed the night market in Tokyo (now Kaifeng City, Henan Province) in the Northern Song Dynasty. At present, it refers to markets that mainly deal at night, such as selling groceries, snacks, games and so on. Night market is often an important tourist attraction in tropical and subtropical countries; In Chinese mainland, Taiwan Province, Hongkong and other places, it is one of the important representatives of civilian life culture.

The most famous night markets are Millennium Kaifeng Gulou Night Market, Xueyuanmen Night Market and Xisi Night Market, Wuhan Hubuxiang Night Market, Nanjing Confucius Temple Night Market, Taiwan Province Shilin Sightseeing Night Market and Shenyang Xingshun Night Market.

In tropical and subtropical countries, the night market is usually an important tourist attraction. In many places in Chinese mainland, Taiwan Province and Hongkong, the night market is one of the important representatives of the civilian life culture. At that time, Tokyo (Kaifeng) had become an unprecedented city that never sleeps in the world.

There are many night markets, and there is a saying that "there are more shops than night markets". The famous night markets are: Qiao Zhou Night Market, Xingjie Ma Night Market, Fanloumenqian Night Market, Zhuquemenwai Street Night Market, Panlou Hotel Summer Night Market, Tushizi East Street Night Market, etc.

Among them, the State Bridge Night Market crosses Imperial Road, facing the river, and is located at the intersection of land and water in Tokyo. Coupled with the spectacular State Bridge and the towering Yue Ming Tower, the scenery here is picturesque, tourists are woven, and there are more poems and songs of literati chanting wine. Su Dongpo, a writer in the Northern Song Dynasty, once wrote a poem, "Golden Dragon looks at the night market, with bright lights ... I wonder if the capital is noisy, so it is called the hometown of rivers and lakes."