Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel reservation - What are the former residences of celebrities in Suzhou? Do you know everything? Answer?

What are the former residences of celebrities in Suzhou? Do you know everything? Answer?

1. Jin Quan Club

Address: No.0/4, Zhongzhangjia Lane, Pingjiang Road.

Quanjin Guild Hall was originally built for Qian Shang, Shanxi Province in the 30th year of Qing Qianlong, and was destroyed and rebuilt by Shanxi silk tea merchants.

There are three halls along the street, with eight-character walls in front of them, and the stage in the door consists of a stage and a balcony. The stage is the rest of the mountain, and the eaves are decorated with operas, dragons, phoenixes and flowers, and the wood carvings are gilded and dazzling.

The present China Kunqu Museum is located in Jin Quan Hall. The inner theater in the main hall can not only show Kunqu opera performances to tourists, but also be a place for friends to shoot songs and sing.

2. Hong Jun's former residence

Address: No.29 Xuanqiao Lane, Pingjiang Road

Walking west along Pingjiang Road Suspension Bridge Lane, you will see a well-preserved Qing Dynasty building, which is the former residence of Hong Jun, the top scholar of Tongzhi in Qing Dynasty and assistant minister of the Ministry of War.

The whole mansion faces south, with a total area of about 3000 square meters. It is the well-preserved former residence of the top scholar in the late Qing Dynasty in the ancient city of Suzhou, with a hall, sedan chair hall, flower hall, hall and upper and lower rooms.

Now, some buildings in Hong Jun's former residence have been converted into Pingjiang Hall of Fame, displaying dozens of stories and related items of celebrities who were born or lived in historical blocks, and opening an exhibition of Chinese imperial examination system and an interactive area of "being the top scholar", so that friends here can not only understand history, but also express their good wishes.

3. Pan's former residence

Address: No.3 Niujiaxiang

Although it is only one street away from the bustling Guanqian Street, Niujiaxiang is deep all year round. At the western end of the hutong, there is a Chinese-style building hidden among trees: the former residence of Pan, the champion of the Qing Dynasty.

Pan's former residence has a history of more than 200 years. Suzhou municipal government started the maintenance on 20 1 1 and completed it on August 20 13, costing 43 million yuan. Today, this is the Suzhou Champion Museum.

4. Pan Zuyin's former residence

Address: South Cross Street, Pingjiang Road Historic District

Pan Zuyin was a flower explorer in Xianfeng period of Qing Dynasty. He worked as a military minister all the way and lived in Suzhou in his later years. He imitated the rules of his grandfather Pan's Royal Mansion in Beijing and transformed his residence into a quadrangle in the north. This square yard is very spacious.

Pan Zuyin's two Western Zhou bronzes, Dayu Ding, Ding and Mao, collectively called "Three Treasures in the Sea", were once collected here. In the 26th year of the Republic of China (1937), on the eve of the Japanese invasion of Suzhou, the descendants of Pan Shi buried Er Ding underground for protection, and in the early 1950s, they dug it up and presented it to the country.

Today, it has been transformed into a Huajiantang boutique hotel. However, whether it is wood, tile or paint, the construction method of ancient buildings is strictly followed, and the materials are as unified as possible with the original components.

5. Wang Hao's former residence

Address: No.8 Tianguanfang, Su Fengli

Tianguan Square is one of the 24 ancient squares in Suzhou, which was built here because of the residence of Wang Hao, a university student in Ming Dynasty.

This house used to be the former site of Wang Yan's former residence "an old courtyard". During the reign of Emperor Qianlong of Qing Dynasty, Lu Yi, a Hui merchant, bought this house and renamed it "Jiashoutang".

Walking into Jiashoutang, the exquisite small courtyard with white walls and tiles, facing the beautiful lake stone at the gate and the quaint and elegant wooden structure from the wing to the hall, there is a low-key aristocratic feeling.

6. Shen Deqian's former residence

Address: No.26 Kuanjiatou Lane

Shen Deqian is a famous poet in Qing Dynasty. He was once called "a great poet in the south of the Yangtze River" and "an old friend in poetry" by Qianlong.

The sign of "Suzhou Kunqu Opera Studio" has been hung in front of Shen Deqian's former residence. The whole house is already a place where Kunqu fans get together to learn the performing arts.

Pick a good time to go, I can bump into them in class, listen to them, look at the plaques, couplets and flowers in Shen Deqian's former residence, and suddenly I will return to Shen Deqian's time.

7. Former residence of Zhang Taiyan

Address: No.38 Jinfan Road, Suzhou

Zhang Taiyan was a democratic revolutionary and thinker in the late Qing Dynasty and the early Republic of China, and a famous master of modern horticulture in China.

Zhang Taiyan has given lectures in Suzhou many times since 1932. 1934, he bought a new villa on the road, settled in Suzhou, and founded the "Zhang Guoxue Research Association" in Suzhou.

Zhang Taiyan's former residence is called "Bird", which is a western-style garden house.

The south front yard is two western-style buildings in the north and south, which were built in the 1930s. It is the place where Zhang Taiyan collects books, writes books, meets people and lives. The facade is a combination of Chinese and western architecture, with fair-faced brick walls, blue tile roofs, Roman-like gates and columns, and wooden doors and windows, which have the flavor of Suzhou traditional architecture and foreign houses.

8. Former residence of Ye Shengtao

Address: No.5 Qingshi Lane, Gunxiufang, Suzhou

The former residence of Ye Shengtao in Suzhou is a quiet and quaint quadrangle with three cloisters, half of which are quadrangles and half are bungalows combining Chinese and western styles.

Ye Shengtao lived here for two years. After the Sino-Japanese War broke out, he moved to Sichuan and other places. After War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression's victory, he never moved back to Suzhou.

At the end of 1984, Mr. Ye decided to donate his homestead to the country to do some cultural things. The renovated former residence of Ye Shengtao became the location of Suzhou Magazine.