Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - Which famous mountains and rivers did Xu Xiake visit? What travel notes did he write?

Which famous mountains and rivers did Xu Xiake visit? What travel notes did he write?

The geographer Xu Hongzu (also known as Xiake) in the late Ming Dynasty traveled for 34 years and wrote 17 travel notes on Tiantai Mountain, Yandang Mountain, Huangshan Mountain, Lushan Mountain and other famous mountains, as well as "Zhejiang Travel Diary", "Jiangyou Travel Diary", "Chu Travel Diary", "Guangdong Travel Diary", "Qian Travel Diary", "Dian Travel Diary" and other works, in addition to those lost, there are more than 600,000 words of travel notes left behind. Others compiled it into "Xu Xiake's Travels". Xu Xiake started traveling at the age of 22, and it lasted 34 years until the end of his life. He has traveled more than half of China, traveling all over East China, North China, Central South, and Southwest China, including Zhejiang, Anhui, and Fujian , Shandong, Hebei, Shanxi, Shaanxi, Henan, Jiangxi, Guangdong, Guangxi, Hunan, Hubei, Guizhou and Yunnan, covering 3 cities including Beijing, Tianjin and Shanghai. Travel to Mount Tai, Putuo, Tiantai, Yandang, Jiuhua, Huangshan, Wuyi, Lushan, Huashan, Wudang, Luofu, Panshan, Wutai, Zhushan, Hengshan, Jiuyi and other famous mountains; travel to Taihu Lake, Minjiang River, Yellow River, Fuchun, Minjiang River, Jiuli Lake, Qiantang River, Xiaoshui, Xiangshui, Yujiang, Qianjiang, Huangguoshu Falls, Panjiang, Dianchi Lake, Erhai Lake and other scenic waters.

Catalogue of his works:

Diary of a Tour to Tiantai Mountain and Diary of a Tour to Yandang Mountain Diary of a trip to Mount Baiyue, Diary of a trip to Mount Huang Diary of a trip to Mount Wutai, diary of a trip to Hengshan, diary of a trip to Guizhou, diary of a trip to Yunnan, diary of a trip to Mount Taihua, diary of a trip to Yunnan, diary of a trip to Mount Taihua, diary of a trip to Mount Wutai, a brief history of Yongchang, a brief history of Lijiang, the origin of King Dharma, tracing the source of the river