Memorial Hall of the Boxer Uprising

Coordinates: 39°05′10″N 117°12′06″E / 39.086062°N 117.201532°E / 39.086062; 117.201532
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Memorial Hall of the Boxer Uprising
Map
Alternative namesLüzutang
General information
Address18 Hejia Lane, Ruyyi'an Street
Town or cityTianjin
CountryChina
Opened1985
RenovatedKangxi period, 1985

The Memorial Hall of the Boxer Uprising (天津义和团纪念馆) in

Hongqiao District
, in Tianjin.

History

The building was originally a Taoist Temple, built in 1719.[1] Sacrifices were held to honour the immortal Lü Dongbin.[2] During the Kangxi period of the Qing dynasty, the temple was rebuilt and named "Lüzutang" (吕祖堂).[2]

In 1900, during the

Boxer leader Cao Futian set his headquarters in the old temple.[3] An altar was built at the temple's main entrance. The Boxer leaders would burn charms, and followers would then drink the ashes mixed in strong wine. They believed this could summon gods and ancient heroes and make them possess their body, rendering them resistant to the bullets fired by the Eight-Nation Alliance. The Red Lanterns supposedly stared at the setting sun to gain the ability to invoke lightning.[1]

In 1985, the building was restored and renamed Tianjin Boxer Rebellion Memorial Hall.[3]

Today

The museum is still currently open. Exhibitions are held concerning the Boxer rebellion history and the Boxer leaders and organisation.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b "Nationalism or Healthy Pride – World's Only Boxer Museum in Tianjin". C.S.News. 2013-11-27. Retrieved 2018-04-01.
  2. ^ a b c Zhang, Jialu. "Understanding Modern China through Tianjin". tj-summerdavos.cn.
  3. ^ a b "Memorial Hall of the Boxers' Uprising,city travel guide,introduction of China tourism city". chinakindnesstour.com. Retrieved 2018-04-01.

39°05′10″N 117°12′06″E / 39.086062°N 117.201532°E / 39.086062; 117.201532