Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - Guess what the picture below represents, 4 words

Guess what the picture below represents, 4 words

1. A horse tramples a flying swallow. 2. Or a national tourist attraction. In four words, it is a "tourist attraction". 3. Another spoof is: "Get out of here immediately" - the combination of "Horse Treading on Flying Swallows" and the earth is jokingly called "Get out of here immediately": a standing horse keeps moving, rolling forward on egg-shaped stones. In many excellent tourist cities, there are iconic sculptures like this: with the Great Wall Beacon Tower as the base, a horse gallops and rolls forward on the earth. However, netizens had mixed reactions to this "magic work" after bursting into laughter. Some netizens lamented that "this interpretation is very vivid and vivid", while others believed that this was "a waste of classic sculptures".

In fact, Ma Chao Fei Yan, also known as Ma Chao Longque, Bronze Galloping Horse, Ma Xi Crow, Eagle (Harrier) Plundering Horse, Ma Ta Fei Falcon, Lingyun Galloping Horse, etc., is a bronze ware of the Eastern Han Dynasty, 1969 Unearthed from the Leitai Han Tomb in Wuwei City, Gansu Province. It was unearthed from the tomb of Zhang Jiang, the military commander who guarded Zhangye during the Eastern Han Dynasty, and his wife, and is now in the Gansu Provincial Museum. Ma Ta Fei Yan is 34.5 cm tall, 45 cm long and 13 cm wide. "Horse Treading on Flying Swallows" has been regarded as a symbol of the superb casting industry in ancient China since it was unearthed. In October 1983, the horse stepping on the flying swallow was designated as the Chinese tourism symbol by the National Tourism Administration. In 1985, the bronze galloping horse was designated as the graphic symbol of China's tourism industry by the National Tourism Administration under the name "Ma Chao Longque", and it has been used to this day. It was designated as a national treasure in 1986.