Introduction to the City God's Hall: Opposite the City God's Hall is a stage built against the river, with a plaque "A Mirror of Ancient and Modern" written in the Yiji Year of Yongzheng in the Qing Dynasty (1725 AD). The Chenghuang Hall was built in the late Ming Dynasty. It is a spacious palace with three front and rear entrances. It is a majestic building with upturned eaves and corners, and is magnificent. Entering the fifth room, there is a couplet engraved on the stone pillar of the mountain gate: Snow takes advantage of the wind, and the countryside can be white for a few days; clouds take advantage of the rain, and the sky and the earth are covered with darkness for a short time. The main hall has three rooms. It is tall and tall. The roof is decorated with "Yunlong". There is a bronze mirror in the middle. There are four characters "Guotai Minan" on both sides. There are raised cornices. Under the eaves, there is a lace plaque with a straight blue background and gold characters "Lefengyongzhenhou Li". . There are drum stones and exquisite reliefs under the stone pillars in the hall. On the left and right pillars there are two dragons hovering in the air with claws dancing. There is a square table in the middle of the hall, on which sits the city god "Hou Li of Yongzhen"; beside it is a statue of his son sitting in the palace, the statue is majestic and upright; leaning against the wall next to the hall is a standing statue of his son.

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