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Longsheng terraced
fields
Longsheng
county in northeastern Guangxi province was the
earliest county to be established in southern
China.
Longsheng town is situated in a densely
forrested area of over 2400 square kilometres
and has a population of only 160 000 people. It
is surrounded by mountains in four sides and lies
100 kilometres north of Guilin, as well as in
the joint area of Heping River and Sang River.
Built on the mountain slopes, the town boasts
rows of tall buildings separated by banyan trees.
Close to Longsheng town there are
the Hot Spring National Park and the Dragon's
Backbone Rice Terraces: 60square kilometers of
terraced rice fields southeast of Longsheng. They
were first built in the Yuan dynasty and completed
in the Qing dynasty by Zhuang people. The terraced
fields are built along the slope winding from
the riverside up to the mountaintop, with the
highest place of an elevation of 885m and the
lowest 380m. The coiling line spirals up from
the mountain foot to the top, making the mountain
looks like huge snail seen from afar.
Only two kilometres west of Longsheng
Town you will come to the Yinshui Dong Village.
It is named after the waterfall that runs down
from the mountaintop resembling a long silver
chain.
It
is said that the village was founded during the
Tang-Song dynasties and gained fame due to the
hard work of generations of the Dong people. In
1737 during the reign of Emperor Qianlong of the
Qing dynasty, Wu Jinyin, the 82nd chief of Yinshui
Dong Village, led the Dong people to rise in rebellion
with the support of the Zhuang, Miao and Yao peoples
against the Qing government. The Qing government
hastily sent troops from neighboring provinces
to put down the rebellion. After the failure of
this rebellion, the village moved to another place
and the original village was abandoned. In recent
years, with the development of local tourism,
Dong people were invited to return their home
village with the 101st village chief of the Wu
clan.In this village, you can see an old drum-tower
and the famous Wind and Rain Bridge, which is
a unique 76 metre long complex consisting of five
pavillions connected by corridors. The Ma Pang
Drum tower 25 kilometres north of Longsheng town
is the largest of its kind: It is a 12 metre high
wooden construction: a nine-story wooden roof
held up by wooden pillars. Such towers (resembling
Chinese pagodas) were set up as meeting points
in almost every Dong village.

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