| Xidi Village - The Museum of Ancient
Residences |
 |
Well-preserved ancient villages shaded on the slopes of the green
hills of the southern part of east China's Anhui Province are acclaimed
by tourists and scholars as the most beautiful villages in the world
and a museum of Chinese ancient residences.
As representatives of those beautiful ancient villages, Xidi and
Hong villages, both located in Yixian County, were added to the
World Cultural Heritage list in 2000. It was the first time that
such ancient houses were put on the list.
Well preserved for more than 400 years, Xidi Village enjoys its
fame for characteristic ancient architectures with more than 300
buildings with features of the Ming (1368-1644) and Qing (1644-1911)
dynasties, 122 of which still remain intact.
The topography of Xidi Village is well planned. It is 700 meters
from east to west and 300 meters from north to south, and those
ancient residential buildings resemble a ship when viewed from a
high place.
Each house has white walls with elaborately-shaped eaves and courtyards,
the later of which are paved with green flag-stone or colorful pebbles
arranged into various designs.
The entrance gates and windows display typical features of local
wood, brick and stone carving. Crystal-clear water in the ditches
connecting every household provides an endless stream to the housewife
for daily life.
The sun and rain over the years have reduced houses in white and
black tiles to a grayish white color, which gives a strong sense
of remote times in the midst of a green forest.
Located not far from Xidi Village, Hong Village is famous for its
enchanting mountains and waters. It is shaped like an ox lying leisurely
beside a stream in front of a mountain.
The high ground is like the ox head, the ancient trees at the entrance
are like ox horns and bridges are like ox hoofs. The houses form
the trunk and the river is like an ox tail. The 1000-meter-long
zigzagging ditch is compared to ox intestines, and the Moon-shaped
pond, Nanhu lake, takes the shape of an ox stomach.
After being listed as a world cultural heritage, the two villages
have been crowded with tourists from home and abroad, which has
totally changed the long-time tranquility in villages.
Fortunately, villagers have realized the importance of relic preservation
and sincerely contributed to the protection work by themselves.
Tourists can easily find that most villagers who still live in the
villages carefully look after their own old-aged houses like specialists.
For better preservation of the houses, Hong Village framed a layout
to figure out different houses and carry out related protection
in 1999.
In order to satisfy the demand of villagers to improve their living
standards while not damaging the old-aged houses, the village authorities
decided to encourage villagers to build new houses out of the protection
area.
In 2002, 179 senior villagers over 60 years old in Xidi Village
jointly proposed a public move to call for eternal preservation
of their rare heritage, attracting more than 1,000 villagers to
attend the ceremony.
To avoid the fire accidents, both villages have installed fire
hydrants in the main streets and asked every house to install fire
control equipment.
In 2003, the local city government instituted a special regulation
stipulating practical causes to guarantee the protection budget
and definite responsibilities of officials.
The provincial government has published a regulation to strengthen
cracking down on the activities of stealing structural components
of ancient houses.
How to handle the contradiction between relic preservation and
tourism development has become the challenge faced by the villagers
and local governments. But all of them have realized and agreed
that any plan should be based on good preservation of ancient houses. |