How is the legend of hell in China divided?

Let me talk about it first. . . Don't confuse fantasy novels with myths and legends. . . China's underworld is not eighteen stories, but it is believed that after the death of ordinary people, ghosts will return to Mount Tai, and the God of Mount Tai, Dongyue the Great, is the master of the underworld. Later, Du Feng was regarded as one of the entrances to the underground world. Eighteen layers of hell can be said to be imported, which is the folk romance of Buddhist legends after the introduction of western Buddhism to the East. It was introduced into China from India during the Southern and Northern Dynasties. Due to the interaction between Yan belief and China's local religious belief system of Taoism, Yan China's Ten Buddhist Temples Theory with China characteristics was formed, and some of them were Ten Temples Theory. So, in fact, it is not eighteen layers of hell, but ten halls of hell. Each temple is in charge of more than ten small hells, which is also the origin of eighteen hells. Eighteen Mud Plows, translated by An Shigao in the Eastern Han Dynasty, completely divided the hell into eighteen layers, which is called eighteen layers of hell today. Eighteen layers of hell are Buddhist classics, and of course there will be earth treasure bodhisattva. Bodhisattva Ksitigarbha belongs to the past Buddha in Buddhism III. After the extinction of the ancient Buddha, Buddha Sakyamuni is now a bodhisattva, a bodhisattva connecting the past and the future, and only then can he prove Bodhi. After Sakyamuni's testimony, the Tibetan Bodhisattva pitied all beings in the underworld, wishing that the underworld was not empty and vowed not to become a Buddha. This is not the content of China myth, but the scripture of Indian Buddhism. Please don't confuse the landlord . Confuse it with a rambling novel . . Um ... . .