Fortune Telling Collection - Comprehensive fortune-telling - Is there a place called Lujiamiao in the south of Luoyang (our hometown is written in our genealogy)?

Is there a place called Lujiamiao in the south of Luoyang (our hometown is written in our genealogy)?

There is a Lvzu Temple in the north of Luoyang.

Lv Zu Temple in Luoyang is located on Mangshan Mountain, 2 kilometers north of the old city of Luoyang. It was built to commemorate Lv Dongbin, one of the "five northern ancestors" of Taoism Quanzhen School. Lv Zu Temple was built in the Qianlong period of Qing Dynasty, but it has been rebuilt and expanded several times, and its scale is getting bigger and bigger, with more and more pilgrims and greater influence.

There are 26 ancient buildings in the temple, which enter the two houses respectively. The layout is rigorous, small and exquisite, with red walls and yellow tiles, six beasts on the roof and lifelike brick carvings. This is really a paradise.

According to legend, when Lv Dongbin traveled eastward to Luoyang, he once practiced monasticism here. Some poems were passed down from generation to generation, but after several generations, the monuments have disappeared. There is an ancient monument in the temple, which records the architectural age of the temple now. The temple was built in the thirty-second year of Emperor Kangxi of Qing Dynasty (A.D. 1694). Ren Zhongfu, a famous scholar in Luoyang, took the lead in donating money to build it, and it took several generations to repair it, which led to today's scale.

Lv Zu Temple has 26 main halls, facing east from west, and built according to the ups and downs of the mountain. They rose step by step from the entrance, the rolling shed, the front hall to the main hall. The entrance faces east, which means "purple gas comes from the east" The entrance is a brick-and-stone voucher door with no wood in it, and the top is a nine-ridge rest mountain style. There are three guest rooms on both sides of the entrance, which have eight immortals painted sculptures. It gives visitors a sense of elegance and tranquility. There is a square altar in the center of the hall, with a Lvzu Pavilion on it, which is dedicated to the statue of Lv Zu. Behind the front hall is the main hall, lattice doors, straight windows, hard mountains and blue tiles, full of youthful atmosphere.