Fortune Telling Collection - Fortune-telling birth date - Who is the Eighth Master in the Old Nine Gates?

Who is the Eighth Master in the Old Nine Gates?

Eight lords is Qi Tiezui of the next three doors, from the novel Tomb-robbing Notes of Nanpai's three uncles, which is specifically introduced in Notes of Wu Xie Private School and Old Nine Gates. Laojiumen is the eighth door, with three subsidiary doors.

Character life:

Qi Tiezui is a strange man in the next three doors.

The Huo family and the harmonic family are both big families, mainly making handicap. From Mengdong to Lingnan, both schools are influential, but Qi Tiezui took the completely opposite route. From then on, he had only one handicap, which was a fortune-telling stall in Changsha Old Tea Camp.

This fortune-telling booth is located deep in a corridor, followed by a small incense hall, which is dedicated to giving people visas and telling fortune at the same time. If you have goods to take, pay sixpence and the fortune teller will take you to the inner hall. There is a hall in the back, full of treasures. Under normal circumstances, this kind of small handicap is easy to be eliminated, but it happened that Qijia's handicap has been opened for several generations, and the business has been very prosperous.

Some people find it strange and don't understand what's wrong. Later, I learned that Qi Tiezui has a strange rule in doing business, that is, when everyone comes to replenish onr's stock, he will give each other a divination. Qimenba is the first calculation in Changsha, and it is extremely accurate, and it is only calculated for people who purchase goods. This is called delivery calculation. It belongs to differentiated competitiveness, or derivative value.

People who steal antiques for a living in other places are extremely superstitious and famous. Even if you don't want the goods, some people are willing to buy one casually to make a quick decision, so business is endless.

Overview of nine-door extended data

The old nine doors are divided into three doors: the upper door, the flat door and the lower door.

1. Go to three doors: Zhang Qishan (Buddha Zhang), February Red (Chen Pi A Si? [ 1]? Master), half a plum.

When you go to Sanmen to be an official, the strategist is a crutch fairy. They are all well-off old families. Their official status has generally been bleached. There are legitimate businesses on the facade, and the official influence is huge. The inverted bucket mainly depends on their own buddies. The three old masters who went to Sanmen were all famous old gourd ladle handles, and they were out-and-out figures in the road at that time. It may be a bit condescending to say that they are local tyrants, because their family's power is similar to that of the small warlords at that time.

2. Ping Sanmen: Chen Pi A Si, Wu Laogou (the grandfather of the protagonist Wu Xie), Hebei Lao Liu.

If the legends of Shangsanmen are mostly British names, good names or gossip, the legends of Pingsanmen are mostly notorious. Ping Sanmen is a thief, and Yamaraja's prodigal son is a laughing Buddha. He is the main force of the Lama. He is a lonely hero. He has at most a few apprentices and walks in the mountains all day. These people are young and greedy. They do everything they can, killing people and looting goods, and their reputation comes from fighting, so they have no worries.

3. Next three doors: Huo Xiangu (Huo Xiuxiu's grandmother), Qi Tiezui and Jie (Jie's grandfather).

The next three doors are for business, and the beauty operator chess reaches the sky. This is one of the few stories. They are all businessmen who have relied on antique dealers, mainly reselling. Although their kung fu is not weak, they are not very active. Xiasanmen is closely related to Heping Sanmen (for example, the Wu family is in-laws), and Shangsanmen and Xiasanmen have relatively few contacts because they have no interest relationship.

reference data

Qi Tiezui-Baidu encyclopedia