Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Lucky day inquiry - Li Mengyang's Tomb

Li Mengyang's Tomb

Li Mengyang was buried in Dayang Mountain of Zhou Jun after his death. Li Mengyang's descendants have been guarding the nearby tombs, and the tombstones have been destroyed, and the tombs have been stolen and dug many times. Incomplete Ming tombstone, with the words "Mr. Kongtong's tomb, rebuilt in Wanli for six years, five seals, autumn moon and auspicious day". In the 20th year of Guangxu in Qing Dynasty, Zhang Zhiping, the ruler of Yuzhou, rebuilt the monument of "Li Kongtong, a poet of Ming Dynasty".

The original cemetery covers several hectares, east to the riverside, west to the riverside, south to Dalongshan and north to Lianhualing. The two mountains are sandwiched by depressions and surrounded by two rivers. There are many memorial archways and stone tablets on the ground, and there are countless inscriptions by scholars and celebrities in past dynasties. The epitaph was written by Cui Gui, a great scholar in Ming Dynasty, and by Zhu Kan, an imperial clan. The branch of the Li family has been living in seclusion in Yong Cheng's tomb since it chose the mausoleum in 12 years.