Lu Jianling, located at the south foot of Fenghuang Mountain, north of Xinxiang City, Henan Province 15km, is the largest and most well-preserved Ming Dynasty tomb in China, and the fourth batch of national key cultural relics protection units announced by the State Council in 1996. National Cultural Heritage Administration plans to include it in the expansion project of the Ming and Qing royal tombs and declare it as a world cultural heritage.
Lu Jian's Tomb is the tomb of King Lu Jian in the Ming Dynasty (A.D. 1368- 1644). Zhu Yishuo (AD 1568- 16 14) was the fourth son of the Ming Dynasty. King Lu Jian's tomb consists of Shinto, King Lu's tomb and Princess Zhao's tomb, with a total area of more than 400 mu.
According to experts, the main architectural layout of LuJian Mausoleum is basically the same as that of Ming Taizu Mausoleum. It is famous for its magnificent scale and exquisite stone carvings, which is of great significance to the study of the mausoleum shape of local governors in the late Ming Dynasty and the architecture and sculpture art at that time.
Xinxiang Municipal Government declared the World Cultural Heritage of Lu Jianling from 200 1. The area around Fenghuang Mountain in LuJian's Mausoleum was once an important production base of building materials in Henan and Xinxiang in the early years. In order to protect King Lu Jian's Mausoleum, the local government completely banned the mining of Phoenix Mountain, completely closed more than 0/00 quarries and cement plants around Kloc, and invested huge sums of money in the protection, repair and environmental improvement of King Lu Jian's Mausoleum, which started the construction of provincial Phoenix Mountain Forest Park and restored the original historical features of King Lu Jian's Mausoleum.