Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - Tourist landscape of Chongren Town

Tourist landscape of Chongren Town

Chongren is a famous tourist town in the south of the Yangtze River. It contains the former residence of Zhang Boqi, Zhanshan Temple, Zhanshan Mountain, Beacon Mountain, Zhangcun Reservoir, Guanglidi Yayuan Hot Spring and other scenic tourist areas that integrate traditional culture and landscape culture.

Chongren Ancient Building Complex, the sixth batch of national key cultural relics protection units that flourished in the Southern Song Dynasty and flourished in the Ming and Qing Dynasties, has been officially opened to the outside world since 2002. With the development of the Zhejiang Hot Spring Lake International Resort Tourism Area project with a total investment of 2.19 billion yuan and the construction of an ecological town, Chongren Town will make every effort to create a tourism brand with hot springs as the leader and ancient towns as the characteristics.

Yushan Gong Temple

Yushan Gong Temple was named after Qiu, a prominent family in Chongren Town, to commemorate its ancestor Yushan Gong. Fifty-five years ago (1790), to be further verified, the Yushan Temple faces south, with a building area of ??about 1,000 square meters. The main building is distributed on the longitudinal axis, with screen walls, foyer, stage, and main hall in sequence from south to north. , back hall. There are wing rooms on both sides between the foyer and the main hall, and walls are built on the east, west and north sides, making the whole building a closed courtyard.

The Yushan Temple was performed in the early days of Shengxian Yue Opera.

The town’s cultural heritage protection units at or above the county level include the Chongren Village Building Complex, Yushan Temple, Zhang Boqi’s Former Residence, Wang Jinfa’s Former Residence, Kuixi Xilu Bridge, Zhanshan Temple, Guidao Monument, and Dongshi. Chunjie Fang, among which the Chongren Village Building Group is a national key cultural relic protection unit (2006), and the Yushan Temple is a provincial cultural relic protection unit.