Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Lucky day inquiry - Why didn't the two villages get married for 300 years?

Why didn't the two villages get married for 300 years?

About 300 years ago, Yuepu Village and Wushan Village, Meilin Village, Nan 'an, Quanzhou, Fujian, made a quarrel over irrigation water sources and vowed not to marry each other. Now the economic cooperation and cultural relations between the two villages are getting closer and closer.

At 9: 00 am on May/KLOC-0, Fu Zifang, former director of Yuepu Village Committee in Nan 'an, and Wang Qiaobi, president of Wushan Village Senior Citizens Association, were elected as auspicious days at the end of March. On this day, the villagers, old and young, gathered at the junction of the two villages, Wu Shan Di Road, to witness this breakthrough of 300 years' history: the ceremony of lifting the marriage ban.

No one can tell the exact time. About 300 years ago, two villages had an argument over an irrigation water source used by * *. The ancestors swore angrily that their children and grandchildren would never marry each other in the future. No one dares to offend the oath of their ancestors, so although the two villages have jointly run a shoe factory and built roads together in recent years, they have never dared to get married.

It was not until March this year that several people from the two villages drank and chatted together and brought up the old things again before deciding to completely solve the matter. So we asked Xiang to ask Zu and drew lots to ask Ji. The "ice-breaking" ceremony officially announced the abolition of the Old Testament, which had imprisoned the two villages for 300 years, and resumed intermarriage.