Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel reservation - Garbo Garden Tickets for Tang Yue Archway Whose garden is Garbo Garden?

Garbo Garden Tickets for Tang Yue Archway Whose garden is Garbo Garden?

When we stepped into Huizhou, the quaint architecture immediately attracted people to the world of Huizhou architecture. The beautiful scenery of Huizhou makes people feel the tranquility of the years. Today, I will take you into Jiabao Garden, the first stop to Huizhou. Garbo Garden always feels less famous. In fact, this garden is a typical private garden in China, and it is a national 5a scenic spot.

When you first set foot in Garbo Garden, you can feel the modern garden feeling inside. The permanent exhibitions in the park include Huizhou bonsai. I have seen too many bonsai, so Huizhou Bonsai Art Museum can take a trip.

All kinds of bonsai are worth seeing. Inadvertently, you will also applaud the ingenious design.

Whose garden is Garbo Garden? Jiabao Garden is a very famous place. It was originally a private garden built by famous Huizhou merchants and salt priests during the reign of Qianlong and Jiaqing in Qing Dynasty.

This garden later developed into the largest private garden and bonsai viewing place in China, next to Tang Yue Paifang Group.

The theme of the garden is Huizhou bonsai, which includes the essence of various schools of bonsai at home and abroad and blends well with the scenic spots of Paifang Group. All these constitute a complete picture of the hometown of Huizhou merchants.

What I want to introduce is Tang Yue Village in Huizhou, an ancient village inhabited by Bao people.

In the village, Bao also built a beautiful archway. There used to be nine archways, but only seven and a particularly large ancestral hall were left.

In the Ming Dynasty, Bao also built a large garden comparable to Suzhou Lion Forest, but it was destroyed by the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom War. Jiabao Garden is inextricably linked with Huizhou Bonsai Art Museum in Shexian County, the birthplace of Huizhou Bonsai Art.

Jiabao Garden History Jiabao Garden was built in Qianlong and Jiaqing years of Qing Dynasty. Its garden is a typical private garden with several fine works. In the past, Suzhou Humble Administrator's Garden and Wuxi Liyuan were called "Three Private Gardens in the South of the Yangtze River".

Garden owner Bao was once a Taoist priest and salt merchant of Zhengsi Salt Law. Family members are also dignitaries, and his brother Bao Zhidao was once the ambassador of Huaibei Salt Transportation and the general manager of Huaibei Salt Affairs. Belonged to the Jiangnan rich at that time.

Later, Bao and his younger brother Bao Zhidao donated money to rebuild the ancestral hall of the Bao family, restored the garden at the entrance of the village, and even established Shixiao Temple, in which Qingyi Hall was dedicated to the hostess of the Bao family. This is a rare women's temple in China. It is rich but kind-hearted. A "Four Poor Houses" has been built here to help the lonely and poor at home.

Huizhou merchants have always been Confucian merchants, and their family members, whether brothers or nephews, are businessmen and officials. Anhui Hui Garden and Huizhou bonsai art were relatively mature in Qing Dynasty, and Jiabao Garden was definitely the representative of Huizhou Garden art at that time.