China Naming Network - Eight-character query< - Where is Long Mai in Beijing, China?

Where is Long Mai in Beijing, China?

In the west of the city, Taihang Mountain extends from south to north. To the north of the city, the Yanshan Mountains surround Beijing. These two mountains meet and merge to form the Long Mai, which is talked about by geomantic omen.

Beijing is surrounded by mountains in the north, west and northeast, forming a natural barrier, guarding this extraordinary ancient cultural capital. Beijing is bordered by Juyongguan in the north, Taihang Mountain in the right and the sea in the left, and its geographical position is very dangerous.

Long Mai is a land of geomantic omen.

In geomantic omen, the name of dragon is often used to represent the trend, fluctuation, migration and transformation of mountains. Because the dragon can be big or small, can bend and stretch, can hide and show, can fly and dive. Like a dragon, this mountain is named Long Mai.

Long Mai originates from Kunlun Mountain in the northwest and extends to the southeast with three Long Mai. Bellon entered Shaanxi from Yinshan Mountain and Helan Mountain, set out from Taiyuan and crossed the sea. Zhonglong entered the customs from Minshan to Qinshan into the sea; Nanlong entered the sea from Yunnan-Guizhou and Hunan to Fujian and Zhejiang. Every big Long Mai has a dry dragon, a branch dragon, a real dragon, a fake dragon, a hidden dragon, a flying dragon, a hidden dragon and a shining dragon.

The central axis of Beijing starts from Yongdingmen in the outer city in the south, passes through Zhengyang Gate, Zhonghua Gate, Tiananmen Gate, Duanmen, Wumen Gate and Taihe Gate in the inner city, passes through Taihe Hall, Zhonghe Hall, Baohe Hall, Gan Qing Palace, Kunning Palace and Shenwumen, and passes through Wanjing Pavilion, Shouhuang Hall and Drum Tower in the Long Live Mountain to reach the center of the bell tower. This central axis connects the outer city, the inner city, the imperial city and the Forbidden City. It is like the backbone of Beijing, which clearly highlights the status of Jiugong and embodies the feudal emperor's thought of "taking the lead in the world".

Reference: Long Mai, a 360-degree Fengshui Mountain in Beijing.