China Naming Network - Eight-character fortune telling - Long Mai in Beijing is actually northwest, ok?

Long Mai in Beijing is actually northwest, ok?

Nowadays, people pay more and more attention to Feng Shui when buying a house, so I can give you some knowledge about Long Mai. There are many sayings about Long Mai in Beijing, one is in Tianshou Mountain, the other is in the central axis of Beijing, and the other is in the imperial tomb in the eastern suburbs. In a thick book Feng Shui in the Forbidden City, when talking about Long Mai in Beijing, the author said that Long Mai in the Forbidden City is Long Mai in Beijing. China's Long Mai is in Kunlun Mountain. After quoting many ancient people to discuss the relationship between Tianshou Mountain and Beijing, he asserted that Long Mai in Beijing is in Tianshou Mountain in Changping and Longdong is in the Forbidden City. The author emphasizes that "the ancients must rely on mountains to build a city, and the ancients must build shaded houses when choosing mountains", "the ancients must seek Long Mai when building a city" and "Long Mai is the first principle in building a city". This means that when the ancients built the Beijing City and the Forbidden City, they had to choose Tianshou Mountain and Long Mai before building the city. If the Beijing city in the Second Ring Road was selected by the Ming Dynasty, it can be attached to the meeting reluctantly, but it happened that this city site was not the first choice of the Ming Dynasty, but the former Yuan Dynasty of the Ming Dynasty chose this site as the capital. The Forbidden City in Ming and Qing Dynasties was also built on the original site of the Forbidden City in Yuan Dynasty, but it moved slightly from north to south. According to the relocation of Long Mai, it was never built in the Ming Dynasty. There are two questions to understand. This mountain in Changping was called Huang Tu Mountain before the Ming Dynasty, and it was renamed Tianshou Mountain after it was selected as the imperial tomb in the Ming Dynasty. Therefore, all the books about the relationship between Tianshou Mountain and Beijing are attached by scholars after the Ming Dynasty. Therefore, it is generally recognized that there are two Long Mai in Beijing: one is the drought vein, which refers to the central axis of the Forbidden City, and the other is the water vein, which only runs from Zhongnanhai to Houhai to Gongwangfu. The central axis is recognized by most feng shui masters. So the house on the central axis sells well. I remember as early as the early 1990s, a villa community in the Asian Games Village sold for thousands of dollars. Now, houses on the central axis are more popular with people. For example, Jinkopattio near Xiaotangshan Sanatorium has booked more than half of it before it officially opened. Let's take a look at Xiguan Beiwang's statement. Some people have interpreted the phenomenon of Beijing's lack of horns in the northwest and its skew in the southeast as "the collapse of the northwest and the subsidence of the southeast" in Feng Shui. Recently, in another national authoritative magazine's Feng Shui album, a professor called the northwest corner "the sky gap" according to the theory of Feng Shui. Therefore, both Beijing City, the northwest of Tongzi River and the Forbidden City are missing a corner. In short, it was intentional. In the history of China, which emperor didn't believe in Feng Shui? Why was there an extra corner in the northwest of Luoyang? Jiankang City in the Southern Dynasties, Tokyo City in the Northern Song Dynasty, Chang 'an City in the Tang Dynasty, the capital of the Yuan Dynasty, and Miyagi City in the Yuan, Ming and Qing Dynasties all lack the northwest corner? Most of the Yuan Dynasty were very typical square capitals, and the streets and alleys were designated by Kyle.