150 yuan for a tour guide. The tour guide sounds like an interpreter on CCTV. It sounds very good. Dahongmen and its wall belong to the original geomancy line, which is equivalent to the wall of the Qingdong Tomb. Later, it was damaged, leaving only the section of Dahongmen. The whole Eastern Mausoleum of Qing Dynasty is mainly composed of Xiaoling, Emperor Shunzhi, and other mausoleums are distributed as the backbone of Xiaoling, forming a layout around the ancestors. According to the emperor system, stone statues can only be built on both sides of Xiaoling Shinto. Later Emperor Qianlong broke the rules and added five pairs of stone statues to Kangxi and Yongzheng, and eight pairs of stone statues to himself. Each mausoleum is laid out with Shinto, Piaolai Stone Stele (Manchu, Mongolian, and Han characters describing the owner of the cemetery), Confucius Bridge, Eastern and Western Dynasty House, Longmen Gate, Liaohe Stove, Divine Kitchen Storehouse, East and West Matching Hall, Rongen Hall, and Erzhumen Gate (only the emperor who enlarged Xinjiang has it, you can see Xianfeng Emperor, there are no Erzhumen Gate), Shiwusuo, Ming Building, Baoding (the grave of the common people's house). Next to the mausoleum is the imperial concubine of each emperor. The imperial concubines and noble concubines of the owner of the mausoleum of the emperor are buried. Only those who have been sealed are eligible for burial. Now tell us some interesting stories. 1) Don't cross the bridge in front of Longmen Gate. That's the Shinto, the way of the deceased, the Yinlu Road. You can walk on both sides of the bridge, the right side is the monarchy road, and the left side is the courtier road. 2) The steps of Longmen Hall are almost smooth because you want the emperor to bow down and bow down to show respect for his ancestors. 3) Qian Dynasty. Long Yuling, exquisitely carved, is full of Buddhist depictions and scriptures, which shows the cultural accomplishment of the Shiquan old man. You can see that there are two pillars at the entrance to the palace. The stone gate is cracked and reinforced in Jiaqing. 4) Dingdong Mausoleum is built by Empress Dowager Cixi and Empress Ci'an at the same time. Later, Cixi demolished and rebuilt her own one, showing the luxury of women. Yongrong luxurious pursuit; 5) Cixi Mausoleum sculptures are Fengshang Longshang or Fengliao Longxing, depicting the political status and ambition of the queen behind the scenes. There is a Royal Stone Road ordered by Cixi inside Longen Palace, where an old 60's was dug out in opposition to the waste residue and now placed outside Longen Gate for everyone to watch; 6) It is rumored that there are 72 tomb rain watering here every year, but in fact there is no such road. Precision, but there is plenty of rain here; 7) Tangshan Earthquake, there is no impact here, no houses collapsed and cracked. Others are also some, I suggest you go before looking for some information online, and Hebei Satellite TV's "uncovering the secret of the Qing Dongling" is also good, have an understanding. In the second half, the tour guide took me to Erlang Temple in the east. The function of Erlang Temple is that the Eastern Tomb of Qing Dynasty is Yin, Erlang Temple is Yang, Yin and Yang intersect, and purple air comes east for auspiciousness. In addition, the emperor came here to burn incense and worship Buddha at the end of each worship ceremony to remove the yin. In an unpleasant episode here, the tour guide began to advise me to burn incense for safety, and I think so. But after burning incense, some Taoists asked me to go into the temple and pray for blessings. I thought it was a process. Well, actually, after worship, Taoists asked me to light incense candles and leave my name. Then everyone knows, merit box. Suddenly, it made my trip not so good. The last time I was in Henan, I kept an eye on it. It's a high probability for Taoist cadres to cheat.