According to
legend, Yellow Crane
Tower was built by the family of an
old pothouse owner living in Wuhan
City long ago, named Old
Xin. One day, a shabbily dressed Taoist priest came to the pothouse and asked
for some wine. Old Xin paid no attention to him, but his son was very kind and
gave the Taoist some wine without asking for money. The Taoist priest visited
the pothouse regularly for half a year when one day the Taoist said to the son
that in order to repay his kindness, he would like to draw a crane on the wall
of the pothouse, which would dance at his request. When people in the city
heard of this, they flocked to the pothouse to see the dancing crane. The Xin
family soon became rich and they built the tower as a symbol of gratitude to
the Taoist priest.
The Yellow Crane
Tower has a very long and
complicated history. It was first built in 223, during the Three Kingdoms
Period (220 - 280). Due to the ideal location, it was built by Sun Quan (182 -
252, King of Wu) as a watchtower for his army. After hundreds of years, its
military function was gradually forgotten and the tower was enjoyed mainly as a
picturesque location. The current structure, however, was rebuilt in 1981 at a
one kilometre distance from the original site, and bears little resemblance to
the historical Yellow
Crane Tower .
During the Tang
Dynasty (618 - 907), many popular poems were written in praise of the tower. It
was these poems that made the Tower so renowned and induced for people to
visit. The tower had different architectural features in different dynasties.
However the tower which stands today is based on the one designed during the
Qing Dynasty. It stands 51.4 meters (about 168 feet) high and has five floors.
The appearance of the tower is the same regardless of the direction it is
viewed from. The roof is covered by 100,000 yellow glazed tiles. With yellow
upturned eaves, each floor seems to have been designed to resemble a yellow
crane spreading its wings to fly.
The Yellow Crane
Tower offers visitors an
abundance of things to see. The exhibit on each floor has a theme, for example,
the theme of the first floor is about legend. On the wall, there is a
nine-meter (about 30 feet) long and six-meter (about 20 feet) wide painted
porcelain picture which depicts clouds, rivers and cranes to represent a
romantic mood in the heaven. The third floor mainly shows poems written to
praise the tower in different dynasties. On top of the tower, visitors are
treated to a fabulous panoramic view of the Yangtze River, its bridge and the surrounding
buildings in Wuhan
City . Outside the tower,
there are bronze yellow cranes, memorial gateways and pavilions.
For more
information, please visit www.top-chinatour.com
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