Sheung Cheung Wai

Sheung Cheung Wai (Chinese: δΈŠη’‹εœ) is a walled village in the Ping Shan area of Yuen Long District, in Hong Kong. It is part of the Ping Shan Heritage Trail.

Entrance gate of Sheung Cheung Wai.
Village shrine of Sheung Cheung Wai.
Defensive wall of Sheung Cheung Wai.

History

Sheung Cheung Wai is one of the three wais (walled villages) and six tsuens (villages) established by the Tang Clan of Ping Shan, namely: Sheung Cheung Wai, Kiu Tau Wai, Fui Sha Wai, Hang Tau Tsuen, Hang Mei Tsuen, Tong Fong Tsuen, San Tsuen, Hung Uk Tsuen and San Hei Tsuen.[1]

It was built about 200 years ago by a line of the Tang Clan that branched out from nearby Hang Tau Tsuen.[2]

Features

The moat that once surrounded the village has been filled.[2] Three of the original watchtowers have collapsed and only the lower storey of the southwest one remains, which has been converted for residential use.[3]

Conservation

Sheung Cheung Wai is the only walled village along the Ping Shan Heritage Trail.[2]

gollark: You SHOULD NOT trust them. You have NO VALID REASON to trust them. You have MANY GOOD REASONS to distrust them.
gollark: It's not no reason. We have reasons. You just don't seem to recognize them as valid.
gollark: You should not, in fact, be trusting said giant profit-maximizing entity and every future version of it and everywhere they might be sending all the data.
gollark: And they probably can make money off it.
gollark: Your argument seems to just be "I totally trust this giant profit-maximizing entity composed of thousands of people and also everyone associated with it and everyone who might be associated with it in the future".

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.