China Naming Network - Weather knowledge - The story of Qingshan having the honor to bury the loyal bones, and the innocent white iron casting the sycophantic ministers.

The story of Qingshan having the honor to bury the loyal bones, and the innocent white iron casting the sycophantic ministers.

This is the inscription on the tomb of Yue Fei behind the kneeling statue of Qin Hui: "The green mountains are fortunate to bury loyal bones, and the innocent white iron casts sycophants."

Loyal bones refer to Yue Fei's bones

The sycophants refer to the treacherous ministers Qin Hui, Zhang Jun, etc.

The first couplet "Qingshan is fortunate enough to bury loyal bones". It is written here that I feel lucky to be able to bury Yue Fei;

The second couplet "White? Innocent" "Making a Ning Chen" describes the portrait of Qin Hui and his wife cast in white in front of Yue Fei's tomb. Instead of scolding the two, he writes about Bai's innocence. Because of the two, they were reviled day and night.

The couplet uses "green mountains are lucky" and "white iron is innocent". "Green Mountains" and "white iron" are dead things, and they are not "lucky" or "innocent" at all, but Jinglian If you look like this, everything in the world seems to have human nature! Qingshan is originally taboo on graves because it will damage the "feng shui", but the couplet says that "Qingshan is lucky enough to bury the bones of loyal ministers." This is like even the mountain gods were moved by loyal ministers. They would rather ruin their own feng shui than be loyal neighbors! The next sentence "white iron casts innocent people into sycophants" has the same reason! It can be seen that the world also feels sorry for the loyal minister!

Background:

Yue Fei was the main general who fought against the Jin soldiers in the early Southern Song Dynasty. However, he was framed by Qin Hui, Zhang Jun and others for rebelling against the imperial court on "unfounded" charges, and was framed to death. Before Yue Fei was killed, he wrote on his confession "The sky is clear, the sky is clear". After Yue Fei was killed, jailer Kai Shun risked his life by carrying Yue Fei's body across the city wall and buried him hastily next to the Jiuqucong Temple. 21 years later, Emperor Xiaozong of the Song Dynasty ordered Yue Fei Zhaoxue, and offered a high reward of 500 guan to retrieve Yue Fei's body. It was moved and buried at the foot of Qixia Ridge with a grand ceremony, where Yue Fei's tomb is now located.

In the fourth year of Jiatai (1204), that is, 63 years after Yue Fei's death, the court posthumously named him King of E. The side hall, Qizhong Temple, was originally dedicated to Yue Fei's parents, but is now an exhibition room for Yue Fei's history of resisting the Jin Dynasty.

Yue Tomb, also known as Yue Tomb. After Yue Fei was killed, jailer Kai Shunqian carried his body and buried it at the foot of Beishan. After Song Xiaozong came to the throne, he was reburied here with ceremony. There is the "Jingzhong Bai Pavilion" at the entrance of the cemetery. On the north wall of the pavilion, there is a stone inscription "National Hero" written by Feng Yuxiang. Entering the cemetery gate, there are stele corridors on both sides, displaying 125 stone stele from past dynasties. The north corridor contains Yue Fei's poems, memorials and other handwritings; the south corridor contains inscriptions written by celebrities in the past dynasties and the Yue Temple was rebuilt several times. The current Yue Fei tomb was designed in the Southern Song Dynasty architectural style when it was renovated in 1979. The stone tigers, stone sheep, stone horses and stone Wengzhong displayed on both sides of the tomb passage are relics of the Ming Dynasty. Under the tomb, there are four iron figures with hands cut behind their backs and kneeling facing the tomb. They are Tai Hui, Wang, Zhang Jun and Wanqi Mao who framed Yue Fei. There is a couplet on the tomb gate behind the kneeling statue: "The green mountains are fortunate to bury loyal bones, and the innocent white iron casts sycophants."