Does anyone know the origin of the Quxi River?

Updated on culture 2024-07-02
9 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    The Quxi River originates deep in the mountains and is formed by the confluence of six small streams, and during the rainstorm season, the river swells, and the low-lying areas on both sides of the river are easily flooded.

    According to statistics, there were 49 floods in the Quxi River recorded in historical records before 1949. Since 1949, there have been nearly 20 major floods in the Quxi River. In particular, on September 4, 1999, the heavy rainstorm was as high as 312 millimeters in 24 hours, and the river water rose sharply, causing 21 deaths, 135 collapsed houses, and economic losses amounted to 600 million yuan, of which Quxi Street also suffered a certain degree of loss.

    In recent years, due to the landfill of construction waste and the deposition of rocks washed downstream, the river channel has narrowed and the riverbed has become shallow. Therefore, the local government attaches great importance to the river widening project.

    The widening plan has invested 12 million yuan, and has entered the stage of relocation, and all the projects will be completed in 2007 as planned. The overall flood control capacity of the Quxi River is less than once in 5 years, and it will reach once in 20 years after treatment. Among them, the Quxi Street section is one of the main reconstruction areas.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    Regarding the origin of the name Quxi, there is such a local saying. The word Qu is the eye of the falcon, which means thrilling, fearful and majestic. This is in line with the fact that it is said that this stream originates from the confluence of the waters of the six streams (i.e., Yuanming, Shuidikeng, Huanglingxia, Zhangkeng, Quandongkeng, and Hengkeng).

    Once a flash flood occurs, it is overwhelming, magnificent, and quite thrilling. Hence the name.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    A New Theory of the Origin of Life Episode 1 - Life Originated from Alien Humans.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    The fifteenth day of the eighth month of the lunar calendar is the traditional Mid-Autumn Festival in China. The origin of the Mid-Autumn Festival, Ouyang Zhan of the Tang Dynasty explained it like this: autumn is between summer and winter, August is in the middle of autumn, and food is the month and a half of August, so it is named. It is commonly known as the August Festival.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    The term "Mid-Autumn Festival" was first seen in "Zhou Li". According to the ancient calendar of our country, the fifteenth day of the eighth month of the lunar calendar is in the middle of August in the autumn of a year, so it is called the "Mid-Autumn Festival". There are four seasons in a year, each quarter is divided into three parts: Meng, Zhong and Ji, the second month in the three autumns is called Mid-autumn, so the Mid-Autumn Festival is also called "Mid-autumn".

    By the time of the Wei and Jin dynasties, there was a record of "Yu Shangshu Town Cattle Confusion, Mid-Autumn Festival Eve and Left and Right Micro Service Panjiang". It was not until the early years of the Tang Dynasty that the Mid-Autumn Festival became a fixed festival. "Tang Shu Taizong Ji" records that "August 15th Mid-Autumn Festival".

    The popularity of the Mid-Autumn Festival began in the Song Dynasty, and by the time of the Ming and Qing dynasties, it has become one of the main festivals in China as well as New Year's Day. This is also the second largest traditional festival in China after the Spring Festival.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    The fifteenth day of the eighth month of the lunar calendar is the traditional Mid-Autumn Festival in China, and it is also the second largest traditional festival in China after the Spring Festival. August 15 is in the middle of autumn, so it is called the Mid-Autumn Festival. China's ancient calendar calls August in the middle of autumn "Mid-Autumn", so the Mid-Autumn Festival is also called "Mid-Autumn Festival".

    The Mid-Autumn Festival is an ancient festival, and worshipping the moon and admiring the moon is an important custom of the festival. In ancient times, emperors had a social system of sacrificing the moon in spring and the moon in autumn, and the people also had the wind of the Mid-Autumn Festival sacrificing the moon. The custom of moon appreciation in the Mid-Autumn Festival was extremely prosperous in the Tang Dynasty, and many poets had verses about the moon in their famous poems, and the moon worship and moon appreciation activities in the Song Dynasty, Ming Dynasty, and Qing Dynasty courts and people were more large-scale.

    There are many monuments of "Moon Worship Altar", "Moon Worship Pavilion" and "Moon Tower" in various parts of our country. Beijing's "Moon Temple" was built for the royal moon sacrifice during the Jiajing period of the Ming Dynasty. Whenever the moon rises in the Mid-Autumn Festival, set up a case in the open air, and offer moon cakes, pomegranates, dates and other melons and fruits on the table.

    According to historical records, the term "Mid-Autumn Festival" first appeared in the book "Zhou Li". By the time of the Wei and Jin dynasties, there was a record of "Yu Shangshu Town Cattle Confusion, Mid-Autumn Festival Eve and Left and Right Micro Service Panjiang". It was not until the early years of the Tang Dynasty that the Mid-Autumn Festival became a fixed festival.

    "Tang Shu Taizong Ji" records that "August 15th Mid-Autumn Festival". The popularity of the Mid-Autumn Festival began in the Song Dynasty, and by the time of the Ming and Qing dynasties, it has become one of the main festivals in China as well as New Year's Day. This is also the second largest traditional festival in China after the Spring Festival.

    Another theory of the origin of the Mid-Autumn Festival is that the fifteenth day of the eighth month of the lunar calendar happens to be the time when the rice is ripe, and each family worships the god of the land. The Mid-Autumn Festival may be the legacy of the Autumn Newspaper.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    China has long had the custom of eating moon cakes on the Mid-Autumn Festival on the 15th day of the eighth month of the lunar calendar, and there are different versions of this custom.

    The common saying is: During the Tang Dynasty, Taizong Li Shimin ordered his subordinate general Li Jing to personally lead his troops to fight in the border fortress in order to conquer the northern Turks and quell their repeated invasions. On August 15, he returned to Beijing in triumph.

    In order to celebrate the victory, music was fired inside and outside Chang'an Castle in Kyoto, and the military and civilians carnivaled all night. At that time, there was a Tibetan man who came to Chang'an to trade, and specially presented round cakes to the emperor to wish him success. Taizong Li Shimin was overjoyed, took the gorgeously decorated cake box, took out the colorful round cakes, pointed to the bright moon hanging in the sky and said:

    The toad should be invited to the moon. Subsequently, the round cakes were distributed to the civil and military officials. Since then, the custom of eating moon cakes during the Mid-Autumn Festival has been handed down.

    One said that it began in the Song Dynasty. In Kyoto and Tokyo (now Kaifeng, Henan) in the Northern Song Dynasty, every Mid-Autumn Festival night, people climb high buildings, climb high mountains, and start to worship the moon when the moon rises. Song Dynasty poet Su Dongpo Shiyun:

    The small cakes are like chewing moons, and there are crisps and syrup. "The mooncakes of that time are very similar to the mooncakes of today.

    Today, we eat mooncakes during the Mid-Autumn Festival, not only to celebrate the harvest, but also to look forward to the reunion of loved ones.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    It should have started with comics at the earliest.,And then there was anime.,It's all started with drawing.。

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Comics must have evolved from words.

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