China Naming Network - Eight-character query< - Who are the three people buried on the Long Mai in China?

Who are the three people buried on the Long Mai in China?

The three people buried on the Long Mai in China are Gan Ling, Qin Shihuang Mausoleum and Huang Di Mausoleum.

Long Mai refers to the rolling mountains. Because mountains are similar to dragons in many ways, China Feng Shui compares mountains to dragons. In China's ancient traditional geomantic omen, "Long Mai" is regarded as a special geographical form.

In ancient geomantic omen, five geographical techniques were first advocated, namely, "finding dragons, examining sand, watching water, acupuncturing and standing upright". Dragon is the geographical context, soil is the meat of dragon, stone is the bone of dragon, and vegetation is the hair of dragon. Looking for dragons, we must first find the mountains of ancestors and parents, judge the pulse, don't be angry, and divide yin and yang. You must know the cause and effect before you can judge the cause and effect.

It is recognized by geomantic circles that Kunlun Mountain is "the ancestor of Wanshan Mountain and the source of Long Mai" and the ancestor of dragons. Long Mai started from Kunlun and spread all over the world. The layout, structure and classification of Long Mai are similar to a big tree, including root dragon, stem dragon, branch dragon and Ye Long. Generally speaking, the place where Long Mai's aura gathers (blossoms and bears fruit) is considered as a treasure trove of geomantic omen (Longdong).

China Long Mai's ancestors originated from Kunlun Mountain. On the left (northwest) of Kunlun Mountain are Tianshan Mountain, Qilian Mountain and Yinshan Mountain. There is Altai Mountain in the north, which is juxtaposed with Helan Mountain, Daxinganling Mountain and Changbai Mountain. On the right side of Kunlun Mountain (northwest and southwest), there are Tanggula Mountain, Himalayan Mountain and Hengduan Mountain.

Long Mai of Kunlun Mountain, sandwiched between the above two mountains, is constantly performing brilliant dances to the East. The main vein of Long Mai falls in Xi 'an (the ancient capital of Chang 'an) in Shaanxi, then flows eastward out of the Central Plains (Henan), and branches to the north, south, east and west at the same time, forming the Kunlun Mountain System.