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Hong Kong
Letting Its Roots Show
By Toni Dabbs
Hong Kong has a
reputation as a progressive center of international commerce. Change is a
constant, with newer and more modern buildings continually altering the
city's skyline. However, beneath the ever expanding forest of glass and
steel high-rises rimming Victoria Harbor, Hong Kong's traditional foundations
remain firmly fixed.
But the connection with
the past is more apparent in the New Territories to the north, the so-called
"land between" that's both a geographical and cultural bridge between
traditional China and modern Hong Kong.
The ancient market town
of Tai Po, on Tolo Harbor, has become something of a boom town, the Kowloon-Canton
Railway (KCR) putting it within commuter distance of Hong Kong's business
core. The bustling market still spreads over many blocks in the old part of
town, its street stalls showing all kinds of goods -- fresh produce, dried
herbs and live seafood, cooking utensils, clothing, even electronics.
Facing
one of the crowded market streets is Man Mo Temple, dedicated to the Taoist
gods of literature (Man) and martial arts (Mo), an odd couple, perhaps, but
a popular combination at places of worship throughout Hong Kong. In the
temple's shady courtyard, old men gather for a game of mahjong. Beyond,
smoke from incense coils and joss sticks almost obscures the red clothed
altar.
Nearby is
the turn-of-the-century Tai Po Market railway station, the only Chinese
style KCR station in Hong Kong. Since being replaced by a new station in
1983, it has become the Hong Kong Railway Museum, exhibiting models,
memorabilia and rolling stock dating from 1911 to 1974.
About eight kilometers
northwest of Tai Po on the KCR line is Sheung Shui, the location of Man Shek
Tong, the main ancestral hall of the Liu clan. Built in 1751, it not only is
a place of worship but also is a setting for important clan ceremonies and
festivals. An elongated courtyard connects the main hall with two smaller
halls on either side. Soul tablets of past generations are arranged in rows
on altars framed with richly painted relief decoration.
A short drive west is
the village of San Tin, where Tai Fu Tai, meaning "important person's
residence" is situated. The only structure of its kind remaining in the New
Territories, the stately country home was built in 1865 by Man Chung-luen, a
scholar who became a high-ranking mandarin.
Crowning
the top ridge of the gracefully sloping tile roof are three-dimensional clay
figures fired at a famous kiln in Shiwan, China. Suspended inside the main
hall are two honorific boards presented by Qing Emperor Guangxu, who
bestowed the Tai Fu title on Man Chung-luen. Inscribed with both Chinese and
Manchu characters, they're the only known examples of their kind in Hong
Kong.
Throughout, the house
is embellished with painted, carved and molded botanical and zoological
Chinese motifs -- bamboo, chrysanthemum, orchid and plum blossom, lion,
unicorn, deer and bat.
Ten kilometers
southwest of San Tin is Ping Shan, site of the largest cluster of historic
structures open to public view in the New Territories. It can be reached by
taking first a ferry from the Central District of Hong Kong Island to Tuen
Mun and then the Light Rail Transit from Tuen Mun to Ping Shan.
The most
ornate buildings in Ping Shan are the Kun Ting Study Hall and adjacent Ching
Shu Hin Guest House.
Built in 1870 by Tang
Heung Chuen to commemorate his father Tang Kun Ting, the study hall was a
place for the sons of the Tang clan to prepare for the Imperial Civil
Service examinations. The examinations ceased in 1904, but the building
continued to serve as a school for clan children until after the Second
World War.
The
adjoining guest house was designed to impress the prestigious visitors and
scholars who stayed there. It's a sampler of classic Chinese architectural
elements -- molded figures on roof ridges, doorways and windows of various
geometrical shapes, well proportioned spaces, elegantly carved and painted
eaves boards and screen panels, glazed ceramic grilles, and granite column
bases.
The most unusual
structure at Ping Shan is the simple three-story, hexagonal Tsui Shing Lau,
which means "pagoda of the gathering stars." Erected more then 600 years
ago, it is the only historic pagoda still standing in Hong Kong.
Other buildings that
can be visited are two side-by-side ancestral halls, built in the 13th and
16th centuries, and two Taoist temples, both several centuries old.
Hung Shing
Temple is dedicated to a man who lived about 1,000 years ago and was
elevated to the status of god for his ability to accurately predict the
weather. Yeung Hau Temple honors a general who sacrificed his life to
protect the last two emperors of the Song Dynasty (960-1279).
Nearby are a
200-year-old well that once was the main source of drinking water for Ping
Shan, a riverside shrine to She Kung who is believed to protect the
community, and the walled Tang clan village of Sheung Cheung Wai.
Sheung
Cheung Wai is not open to the public because it's still inhabited, but
curious tourists can find out what lies within a walled village at Sam Tung
Uk, a Chan clan walled village preserved as a museum in Tsuen Wan, about 12
kilometers southeast of Ping Shan. Tsuen Wan is easily accessed from Hong
Kong Island and the Kowloon peninsula via the Mass Transit Railway.
Sam Tung Uk, meaning
"three-beam dwelling," contained three rows of buildings when it was
constructed in 1786. A longer row at the back and a perpendicular row along
each side were added as the population grew. Today, its rooms display period
furnishings, kitchen implements and farm tools.
The Heritage Tour, a
five-hour coach tour operated by Gray Line, stops at a number of these
cultural treasures in the New Territories, and the Heritage and Architecture
Walk: New Territories, a four-hour audio-guided walking tour, focuses on Tai
Po. Arrangements for both may be made through the Hong Kong Tourism Board
Visitor Information and Services Center at the Star Ferry Concourse in Tsim
Sha Tsui.
by Toni Dabbs
FOR MORE INFORMATION
Hong Kong Tourism Board
9 Temperance Street, Third Floor
Toronto ON M5H 1Y6
Ph: 800-563-4582 or 416-366-2389
http://www.discoverhongkong.com
Copyright 2002 by Toni
Dabbs. This work, including photographs, is protected by copyright and may
be used only for personal non-commercial purposes. All other rights are
reserved, and commercial use is prohibited without permission of the author.
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