- The Plum Garden
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The Chinese Plum Garden (Chinese: 梅园; Pinyin: méi yuán) is a botanical garden on Lake Tai in Jiangsu, China. It is most prominent in spring when 4000 fruit trees blossom in the park.[1]
Rong's Plum Garden, often referred as "The Plum Garden", is most famous for its many types of old plum trees, newly imported and planted Denmark tulips, as well as the old mansions of Rongs family in Eastern China. It locates in west part of Wuxi city, Jiangsu province, China.
Contents
History
The garden was the old site of a house of Xu Dianyi who is the Qing dynasty scholar. In 1912 Wuxi Entrepreneur Rong Desheng the father of Rong Yiren purchased the land, for the purpose of "Spread Fragrance to the World", planted some 3000 plum trees. For reason of varies of plum trees the place was named "The Plum Garden".[2]
The garden circles Rong's previous mansion, lean against Mt. Longshan. Inside gardens the old owner Rong and nowadays Plum Garden management office set up Tianxin stage, Xixin spring, Qingfen pavilion, Nianqu pagoda (Chinese: 念劬塔; pinyin: Niàn qú tǎ), Zhaohe pavilion, Xiaoluofu, Songbin hall, Huoran cave and Kaiyuan temple. The Nianqu pagoda was set up in 1930 for remembrance of 80th birthday of the dead mother of brother Rong Desheng and Rong Zongjing. It is the highest point of the plum garden and best place for watching blooming plum trees all over. Starting from Rong's family, The Plum Garden was called one of the three best places for appreciating plum trees in Jiangnan, together with plum trees in Mt. Dengwei of Suzhou and Mt. Chaoshan of Hangzhou.
In 1955, Rong Yiren donated whole garden (except for the private mansion) to the country. In 1960, the garden expanded to Mt. Hengshan of Wuxi, making its area more than 860 acres. In 1994 the garden was listed as "Wuxi heritage protection unit". In 2006 it was listed as "China key heritage protection unit".
Gallery
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Entrance of Old Plums and Peculiar Stone museum (simplified Chinese: 古梅奇石馆; traditional Chinese: 古梅奇石館; pinyin: Gǔ méi qí shí guǎn),[2]
See also
Reference
- ^ China. Eye Witness Travel Guides. pp. 216.
- ^ a b synyan (2009-03-07). "最忆江南(22)——无锡·梅园香雪海" (in zh-cn). http://synyan.spaces.live.com/blog/cns!E4FFF8FE51796E85!12807.entry. Retrieved 2009-12-16.
External links
Coordinates: 31°33′15″N 120°13′07″E / 31.554253°N 120.218548°EThis garden-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.