Xu Garden was built in 1915 on the site of the former Peach Blossom Dock (t桃花塢,s桃花坞,Táohuā Wù) garden.[2] Designed by Yang Bingyan, the garden was established by locals in appreciation of Xu's protection and patronage.[3] Open to the public, it originally covered about 10 mu (0.6 ha or 1.5 acres) and included lotusponds, pavilions, terraces, and open halls.[3]
Components
The park is noted for the attractive woodwork in its traditional pavilions.[4][5] These include the Hall of Listening to Orioles(t聽鸝館,s听鹂馆,Tīnglí Guǎn), named for the singing venue in the Old Summer Palace, itself named for various Tang poems by Du Fu.[2] Two iron cauldrons sit before it, each weighing about 3 metric tons (3.3 short tons) and dating to the 6th-century Xiao Liangdynasty.[2] The nearby pond is large by the standards of classical Chinese gardens.[1]
Ye Forest (叶林, Yè Lín) or Ye Garden (t叶園,s叶园,Yè Yuán) is also included under the garden's administration.[7] Covering 4.8 hectares (12 acres), it was created by Ye Xiufeng in 1927 as a private garden for his father,[7] the teacher Ye Weishan. It is principally covered in cedar and cypress.[7]
See also
Xu Garden (煦园) beside the Presidential Palace in Nanjing, Jiangsu, China
^ abc"Ye Forest", Official site, Yangzhou: Slender West Lake Scenic Spot, 2024, archived from the original on 2024-01-29, retrieved 2024-01-30.
Bibliography
Knowles, Christopher (1999), Exploring China, New York: Fodor's.
Thompson, Hugh; et al., eds. (2018), China, Eyewitness Travel, New York: DK Publishing, ISBN978-1-4654-7861-0, archived from the original on 2024-03-19, retrieved 2024-03-19.