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Has it ever snowed in Guangzhou?

Question 1: Has it ever snowed in Guangzhou in history? Hello! I just checked the Guangzhou Chronicles; there are actually records of snow in Guangzhou!

According to the records of Nanhai County (Nanhai County is located in Guangzhou), there have been 13 snowfalls since the Song Dynasty, with an average snowfall of more than 50 years. The last snowfall was in 1929. Please take a look at the snow conditions recorded several times in Nanhai County Chronicles in detail:

In December of the fifth year of Chunv in the Song Dynasty (early 1246), there was heavy snow for three days, with more than a foot of snow accumulated, which was unprecedented in Yanfang.

In the thirteenth year of Yongle (1415) of the Ming Dynasty, there was snow in winter and the plum trees died.

In December of the third year of Longqing's reign in the Ming Dynasty (1569), there was heavy snowfall in Xiqiao Mountain, and the trees were all icy. It took two days to clear up.

In the 22nd year of Emperor Kangxi of the Qing Dynasty (1683), there was heavy snow and frost in winter, and all the trees died.

On December 22, the fifteenth year of Daoguang’s reign in the Qing Dynasty (1835), heavy snow covered the sky like flying catkins and covered more than four inches of the ground.

On the night of November 29, the third year of Guangxu’s reign in the Qing Dynasty (1877), wind, rain, thunder, lightning, snow and hail came, and many fish died of ice.

On November 17th and 18th of the 18th year of the reign of Emperor Guangxu of the Qing Dynasty (early 1893), there was heavy snow, with more than an inch of snow on the flat ground.

January of the 18th year of the Republic of China (1929). Since the beginning of winter, the weather has been extremely warm and it has not rained for a long time. It started to rain continuously on the 27th, and the north wind blew strongly in the early morning of the 29th. It turned to light snow at dawn, and after dawn, it was quite cold. On the morning of the 30th, there was still some snowfall, and it got colder in the afternoon. The plum blossoms and red chrysanthemums in Central Park (in Guangzhou, when Nanhai County was in Guangzhou) were covered with snow, all of which were bright white. On the morning of the 31st, it was still snowing and extremely cold. I checked the morning panfu road and found an old beggar dead on the roadside.

Question 2: Has it never snowed in Guangzhou? According to historical records, it snowed in Guangzhou a long, long time ago, but it is not such a romantic thing in our lives. I personally think that it snowed before 2007. The winter in Guangzhou is not too cold. It only lasts a few days and is short. It is better to say it is autumn than winter. In the tepid winter of 2007, a so-called rumor spread wildly in Guangzhou, saying that it would snow and become extremely cold in the near future. The rumor was very mysterious. For a time, down coats and cotton-padded jackets and trousers, which are impossible to wear in Guangzhou's winter, filled the shopping mall's clothing area. Guangzhou locals sneered at this legend and dismissed it, thinking it was just a promotional gimmick played by merchants. The winter of 2007 was still warm, not cold.

An unusually violent snowstorm hit our country in 2008, and Guangzhou was not spared from the impact. The temperature that year dropped to about 2-3 degrees. The vigorous Spring Festival travel at Guangzhou Railway Station at that time should be included in the It's in the history books. Since that year, the winter in Guangzhou has become colder and colder, and the cold time has become longer and longer. This year, Eurasia has experienced extremely cold weather. The snow has fallen heavily, and the thickness of the snow has reached several meters. The temperature has repeatedly hit record lows in many areas of our country. In late November last year, Guangzhou went from summer to winter overnight. The autumn weather of clear skies and cool breezes was gone, and it has remained cold to this day. The so-called rumor in 2007 now seems not to be a rumor, but rather an accurate prophecy!

Recently I read the news and some experts predicted that the global cold will last for about 30 years. This sounds a bit alarmist. Is the ice age really coming? What about warm winter? Gone, it had been noisy for N years. The violent storms caused by carbon dioxide in the warm winter were blown to nowhere by the raging cold storms and snow. The so-called scientists and so-called experts, the war of words between warm winter and cold winter, it’s so lively when you sing and I come on stage, but it’s a pity that God has laws, privileges, and tyranny, and it’s not up to people to control heaven. Easy.

If the cold winter continues, I will wake up early in the morning on a certain day in a certain year and open the window. What I will see is that among the high-rise buildings and among the flowers, there is a white blanket, with soft and beautiful flowers floating in the air. , charming, romantic snowflakes, we will not find it strange, because our lovely earth, our lovely home, has entered an extremely cold ice age. If that day comes, should we feel excited about having snowball fights and making snowmen on the streets of Guangzhou, or should we feel sad that the end of the world is coming?

Question 3: When did it snow in Guangzhou? It snowed eighty years ago. The lowest temperature after liberation was -0.3 degrees, which occurred in January 1955.

On December 22, 1999, there was also a temperature of 0 degrees, but it was fleeting. But the chance of snow in Guangzhou is very low.

Because Guangzhou is located in a low latitude area, far away from the sources of cold air masses in high latitudes. In addition, many east-west mountains in my country can effectively block the cold air from the sources of cold air masses in high latitudes from going south. Therefore, Guangzhou Chance of snow is low.

However, in some years, the cold air from the south is too strong, forming a strong cold wave weather, which causes the Guangzhou area to cool down sharply and may cause snowfall.

Question 4: How many times did it snow in Guangzhou in one ***? There were 9 snows in one ***. On January 24, 2016, affected by the super cold wave, it snowed the 9th time in a century. .

Song Dynasty: Early 1246

Ming Dynasty: Winter 1415

Ming Dynasty: Winter 1569

Qing Dynasty Kangxi: Winter 1683

Daoguang of the Qing Dynasty; winter of 1835

Guangxu of the Qing Dynasty: winter of 1877 Guangxu of the Qing Dynasty: winter of 1893

Republic of China: early 1929

New China: January 24, 2016

Question 5: How many times has it snowed in Guangzhou’s history? It snowed in Guangzhou! According to historical records, Guangzhou has snowed nine times:

Early 1246 in the Song Dynasty

Winter 1415 in the Ming Dynasty

Winter 1569 in the Ming Dynasty

Winter of 1683, Kangxi period of Qing Dynasty

Winter of 1835 of Daoguang period of Qing Dynasty

Winter of 1877 of Qing Dynasty Optics

Early year of 1893 of Qing Dynasty Optics

Early Republic of China 1929

New China January 24, 2016.

Everything is due to the grievances of Guangdong shareholders 233333333

Question 6: How many times has it snowed in Guangzhou? How many times has it snowed?

1246, 1415, 1569, 1683, 1835, 1877, 1893, 1929, 2016. January 24, a rare heavy snowfall in a century

Question 7: When was the last time it snowed in Guangzhou? The first time it snowed was 124 years ago in 1892

Question 8: It has never snowed in Guangzhou? It snowed before the founding of the People's Republic of China, but not since the founding of the People's Republic of China! Qu Dajun once said: "There is frost but no snow in Guangzhou, but the frost is so thin that it is not visible." Daoguang's "Guangdong General Chronicle" also said: "There is no snow south of the mountain, and frost is not common." Guangzhou is located in the subtropical zone, and there is no snow in winter. , is the norm, but there are unpredictable weather conditions, and it is not surprising to see snow occasionally. Qu Dajun once sang about the heavy snow in Luofu Mountain and the snow in Antelope Gorge. Daoguang's "Guangdong Tongzhi" recorded snow in Guangzhou many times.

There is a line in the Tang Dynasty poet Xu Hun's poem "Nostalgic for Climbing the King's Terrace in Winter": "The snow is flying on the riverside at the Yangzi Mansion, and the flowers are blooming on the Yuewang Terrace by the sea." Yangzi refers to Yang Fu, the emperor of the Eastern Han Dynasty (? -105 AD), Yang Zi lived on the south bank of the Pearl River. "The Biography of the Sages of Guangzhou" written by Huang Zuo of the Ming Dynasty said: "Yang Fu's house was on the south bank of the Jianghu River. He tried to move it to Luoyang and plant pine and cypress trees in front of the house. The trees were filled with snow in the middle of winter." This may be the earliest record of snow in Guangzhou, but this time it snowed, both There is no date, and there are no records of people at that time. If it is regarded as "proving history through poetry", there is no supporting evidence and it can only be regarded as a legend.

Since the Southern Song Dynasty, it has snowed in Guangzhou. According to local annals and timely commentators, there is "Heavy Snow in Guangzhou in December of the fifth year of Chunyou (1245)". Dai n's "Guangzhou General Chronicles" quoted "County" as saying: "In the early days of the twelfth lunar month, there was heavy snow for three days, and there were more than a foot of snow, which was unprecedented in Yanfang. At that time, Fang Dacong went out to inspect the province, and the poor people and the camps were exhausted. , all gave min money to sympathize with the cold, and the county was delighted. "In the winter of the thirteenth year of Yongle (1415), there was snow in Guangzhou, Panyu, and Nanhai, and the plum blossoms were withered." In the winter of the 16th year of Jiajing (1537), there was heavy snow in Panyu and Nanhai. In December of the forty-sixth year of Wanli (1618), there was heavy snow in Conghua for three days. "It was very cold at that time. The day was like pearls, and the next day was like goose feathers. From the sixth to the eighth day, it was over. In the valley, the peaks stood on the walls, and the forests were all green. My father said that it had never been like this before. He has grown older in succession. "In the seventh year of Chongzhen (1634), there was a heavy snowfall in Conghua.

On the eighteenth day of the first lunar month in the eleventh year of Shunzhi (1654), there was heavy snowfall in Guangzhou and Longmen. On the night of December 20, the fifth year of Kangxi's reign (1666), there was heavy snowfall in Guangzhou, Panyu, and Nanhai. On December 22, the fifteenth year of Daoguang (1835), there was heavy snowfall in Guangzhou. He Kun, a poet from Dongguan who lived in Guangzhou at that time, described it in the poem "Heavy Snow in Guangzhou on the Twenty-first Night of Yiwei": "...the twenty-first night of Yiwei. , the window is open and the wind is blowing, thousands of houses are open in the early morning, and the young people are surprised. At first, they suspect that Luofu spring has come, and thousands of plum blossoms are blooming. They also suspect that kapok is ripe in May, and snow falls in front of the Nanhai Temple at midnight. The swaying day has stopped, the mandarin tiles are in the flat ditch, and the sandals have no teeth. "Gang..." It snows heavily in Panyu, "it has been ripe for many years." In the South China Sea, "heavy snow covered the sky like flying catkins and covered more than four inches of land." "The heavy snow covered the sky like flying catkins at Yinmao, the tree houses were all white, covering three or four inches of ground, and the carving stopped at Chen".

On the third day of the first lunar month in the eighth year of the Republic of China (1919), it snowed slightly in Qingyuan. On the first day of December in the 9th year of the Republic of China (1920), Qingyuan "snowed".

Since the Republic of China, the chronicles of Guangzhou and various counties were written at different times and with interruptions. For example, the "Guangzhou Prefectural Chronicle" was discontinued for more than 100 years, and the lower limit of each county's Chronicle is not uniform. For the time being, we will record what we have seen in the chronicles, and we cannot rule out the possibility that there may be snow and lack of records. Therefore, the snowfall records in Guangzhou since the Republic of China need to be verified in a separate article.

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1415 Ming Dynasty

1634 Ming Dynasty

1835 Qing Dynasty

1892 Qing Dynasty

1929 Min Dynasty

I don’t know if 2016 counts

1245---1279 the demise of the Southern Song Dynasty occurred respectively

1415---1449 Tumu Fort Incident, the Ming Dynasty turned from prosperity to decline

1634---1644 Li Zicheng destroyed the Ming and Qing armies and entered the customs, China was subjugated for the second time

1835---1840. 6-1842 The first Opium War began

1892 ---1911 The fall of the Manchu Qing Dynasty

1929---1937 The outbreak of the Anti-Japanese War

2016---?

Question 10: Has it ever snowed in Guangzhou? A brief review of snow in Guangzhou. Qu Dajun once said: "There is frost but no snow in Guangzhou, but the frost is also very thin and invisible." ② Daoguang's "General Chronicles of Guangdong" Yiyun said: "There is no snow south of the mountains, and frost is not common." ③ Guangzhou is located in the subtropical zone, and it is normal to have no snow in winter. However, there are unpredictable weather conditions, and it is not surprising to have snow occasionally. Qu Dajun once sang about the heavy snow in Luofu Mountain and the snow in Antelope Gorge. Daoguang's "Guangdong General Chronicle" recorded snow in Guangzhou many times. ? It snowed not only in Guangzhou, but also in Wanzhou (now Wanning County), Qiongshan, Lingao and Chengmai on Hainan Island. Zhengde's "Qiongtai Chronicles" records that in the first year of Zhengde (1506), "there was heavy snowfall in Wanzhou". A local scholar, Wang Shiheng, sang: "Sprinkle salt and fly catkins according to the demeanor, and they will respond to countless trees. The severe and cold weather penetrates the black mink fur, Suddenly, the road to Dongshan is white. There has been no snow in central Guangdong since ancient times. Rock flowers are blooming all over the sky in spring. Last night, every family wore their clothes and betel nuts fell to the top of the mountain. Sitting around the fire is a strange thing for hundreds of years. "In December of the ninth year of Chongzhen (1636), "it rained and snowed for three days and nights, and all the trees were withered"⑤. In November of the 23rd year of Kangxi (1684), Qiongshan "rained and snowed, the plants and trees fell, and more than half of the coconuts and palms died"⑥. In November of the 20th year of Jiaqing (1815), "heavy snow fell from the sky, causing many injuries to palms, coconuts, and trees"⑦. There is still snow on Hainan Island, let alone Guangzhou? There is a line in the Tang Dynasty poet Xu Hun's "Nostalgia for Climbing Over Wangtai in Winter": "Snow flies by the river to Yangzi's house, and flowers bloom on the seaside." ⑧ Yangzi refers to Yang Fu, Eastern Han Dynasty During the reign of Emperor He (?-105), Yang Zi lived on the south bank of the Pearl River. "The Biography of the Sages of Guangzhou" by Huang Zuo of the Ming Dynasty said: "Yang Fu's house was on the south bank of the Jianghu River. He tried to move Luoyang pine and cypress trees in front of his house. The trees were filled with snow in the middle of winter." This may be the earliest record of snow in Guangzhou, but this time it snowed, both There is no date, and there are no records of people at that time. If it is regarded as "proving history through poetry", there is no supporting evidence and it can only be regarded as a legend. Since the Southern Song Dynasty, it has snowed in Guangzhou. It has been mentioned in local annals in time, such as "It snowed heavily in Guangzhou in December of the fifth year of Chunyou (1245)". Dai Zhi's "Guangdong General Chronicles" quoted "County Chronicles" as saying: "In the early days of the twelfth lunar month, there was heavy snow for three days, and there were more than a foot of snow, which was unprecedented in Yanfang. At that time, Fang Dacong went out to inspect the province, and the poor people and the camps were exhausted. After they died, they were all given min money to sympathize with the cold and make the county happy. "⑨In the winter of the 13th year of Yongle (1415), there was "snow and plum blossoms died" in Guangzhou, Panyu and Nanhai. In the winter of the 16th year of Jiajing (1537), there was heavy snow in Panyu and Nanhai. ⑾In December of the forty-sixth year of Wanli (1618), there was heavy snow in Conghua for three days. "It was very cold and overcast at that time. The sky was like pearls in the daytime and like goose feathers the next day. From the 6th to the 8th, it was over. In the valley, the peaks stood on the walls and the trees stood tall. The old man said that this had never happened before. Naturally, he has been living for many years. "⑿ In the seventh year of Chongzhen (1634), there was heavy snow in Conghua. ⒀On the eighteenth day of the first lunar month in the eleventh year of Shunzhi (1654), there was heavy snowfall in Guangzhou and Longmen. ⒁On the night of December 20, the fifth year of Kangxi's reign (1666), it snowed heavily in Guangzhou, Panyu, and Nanhai. ⒂On the afternoon of the 21st, it snowed heavily in Longmen. ⒃The poet Chen Gongyin wrote "Guangzhou Guest House Night Snow Song" and sung: "It begins to darken on the 20th day of winter, and the dark clouds are all around and the sky condenses. The light rain comes from the corner of the house, and gradually I feel the rustle and startle the crowd. Open the pavilion and come out to Libai. Shine your eyes and look down at the snow-filled path. The voices of each other are full of hope, and the children are blooming in the brocade sleeves. In the winter of 1683), Guangzhou, Panyu, and Nanhai experienced "heavy frost and snow, and many trees died"⒅. In November of the 29th year of Kangxi's reign (1690), in Conghua, "Frost and snow fell frequently, all the leaves were withered, and many fruit trees were killed. Next year, the lychees will not be ripe, and there will be a severe drought in spring and summer." In December, it snows heavily in Guangzhou. ⒇In the winter of the forty-second year of Kangxi (1703), it snowed in Xinfeng. (21) In the winter of the sixth year of Yongzheng (1728), there was heavy snow in Xinfeng. (22) In the first month of the 23rd year of Qianlong’s reign (1758), there was snow in Guangzhou, Panyu and Nanhai. (23) In the winter of the forty-seventh year of Qianlong's reign (1782), there was heavy snowfall. (24) In the spring of February, the fifty-third year of Qianlong's reign (1788), it rained and snowed for days in Qingyuan (25). In the winter of the eleventh year of Daoguang (1831), there was snow in the South China Sea and Longmen. (26) In November of the twelfth year of Daoguang's reign (1832), there was snow in Nanhai and Longmen, and in Qingyuan, "the snow covered several feet like cotton" (27). In the winter of the thirteenth year of Daoguang (1833), there was heavy snowfall.

(28) On December 22, the fifteenth year of Daoguang (1835), there was heavy snowfall in Guangzhou. He Kun, a poet from Dongguan who lived in Guangzhou at that time, wrote in "The Second Day of the twelfth lunar month...>>