China Naming Network - Eight-character query< - Where is Hu Feng College?

Where is Hu Feng College?

Hufeng Academy is located in Huizhou West Lake. Its predecessor was Juxiantang, which was built in the fourth year of Chun (1244), and changed to an academy after 10. In Song Dynasty, Hu Feng Academy was built in Yingangling, and moved here in the thirty-third year of Emperor Kangxi of Qing Dynasty (1695). There are pavilions and marshes in the yard, which are places to rest. In the sixth year of Jiaqing, the backyard was abandoned, and the magistrate Bing Yi was slowly rebuilt, still named "Hu Feng Academy". There are urban management building, music group hall, Zhao Qianting and bath pool in the courtyard. 1996 changed to Huizhou Normal School, and changed to Huiyang Normal School after liberation. During the Cultural Revolution, it was changed to a conference guest house. 1978 was reopened as Huizhou Teachers College, and 1979 was changed to Huiyang Teachers College. 1993, changed to Huizhou College.

During the Ming and Qing dynasties, Huizhou's style of writing was more prosperous. Hufeng Academy is the highest institution of learning in Huizhou. Since its establishment, it has experienced many ups and downs, but "students gather together while others struggle to learn", which has trained many accomplished students and greatly promoted the cultural construction of Huizhou. It is one of the famous academies in Lingnan. According to government records, there were 53 scholars in Huizhou in Song Dynasty and 44 in Ming Dynasty. Since the Qing dynasty, Huizhou people and literature have risen greatly, and celebrities have emerged in large numbers, making great achievements in poetry, calligraphy and painting, epigraphy and so on.

At present, the ancient archway built in front of the campus is engraved with stone carvings written by Song Xiang, a famous scholar of Jiaqing in Qing Dynasty (180 1). The plaque reads "Hu Feng Academy", and the couplet reads "Ancient Zou Lu with a small cultural scene". Calligraphy is solemn and exquisite, vigorous and detached.