Is it half price for undergraduates in Longmen Grottoes?

Longmen Grottoes offer half-price concessions to students who take the national unified college entrance examination.

Full fare (RMB): 100 yuan/person.

Ticket price (RMB) is half price: 50 yuan/person.

Half-price ticket preferential target

1, over 60 years old and under 70 years old (including residents of Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan provinces, who buy half-price tickets with the Pass for Hong Kong and Macao Residents to and from the Mainland and the valid identity documents of mainland travel permit for taiwan residents);

Minors aged 2.6 years (excluding 6 years) to 18 years (excluding 18 years);

3. Full-time undergraduate and below students who have participated in the national unified college entrance examination (with their valid ID card or household registration book);

4. Students studying in China (student ID card and ID card should be used at the same time).

Handler:

Buy a half-price ticket at the ticket center with a valid personal certificate.

The above preferential measures are only applicable to citizens of China (including Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan); Part-time students such as self-taught students, night college students, TV university students and adult education students are not among the preferential targets.

Preferential target of free tickets:

1, elderly people over 70 years old;

Children under 2.6 years old (including 6 years old) or under 1.2m in height (including 1.2m);

3. Servicemen and disabled soldiers with valid certificates such as military card, military officer card, student card and disabled soldiers card; Retired personnel (with retirement certificates) and retired military cadres (officers, civilian cadres and non-commissioned officers with retirement certificates); Model workers at or above the provincial or ministerial level (with model worker certificate) and national outstanding experts (with outstanding expert certificate);

4. Disabled persons (with the Disabled Persons' Card issued by the China Disabled Persons' Federation, they must be used together with their valid ID cards); Guardians of persons with visual and intellectual disabilities and persons with first-and second-degree physical disabilities;

5. Reporter (holding a journalist card issued by the State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television). Journalists from Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan should hold a press card or work permit stamped with the official seal of the unit, and use it together with the Hong Kong and Macao Pass, Taiwan Province Entry Pass and Mainland Residents' Pass to and from Taiwan).

Handler:

1. Those who enjoy free tickets must show their valid and legal certificates. I will go to the ticket center, and after verification by the ticket inspector, I will get free tickets to enter the scenic spot.

Older people over 2.70 years old can directly enter the scenic spot with valid ID cards.

3. Children under1.2m directly enter the scenic spot.

The above preferential methods are not limited to the nationality of minors under 1.2 meters, and others are limited to China citizens (including Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan).

Introduction to Longmen Grottoes:

Longmen Grottoes is one of the treasures of stone carving art in China. It is now a world cultural heritage, a national key cultural relic protection unit and a national AAAAA-level tourist attraction. It is located in Longmen Mountain and Xiangshan Mountain on both sides of the Yihe River in Luolong District, Luoyang City, Henan Province. Longmen Grottoes, Mogao Grottoes, Yungang Grottoes and Maijishan Grottoes are also called the four major grottoes in China.

The Longmen Grottoes were dug in the reign of Emperor Xiaowen of the Northern Wei Dynasty, and after more than 400 years of large-scale construction in the Eastern Wei Dynasty, the Western Wei Dynasty, the Northern Qi Dynasty, the Sui Dynasty, the Tang Dynasty, the Five Dynasties and the Song Dynasty, the length from north to south was 1 km. Today, there are 2,345 grottoes, more than 654.38 million statues and more than 2,800 inscriptions. Among them, Longmen Twenty is the essence of Weibei calligraphy, and Chu Suiliang's A Que Buddhist Shrine Monument is a model of regular script art in the early Tang Dynasty.

Longmen Grottoes lasted for a long time, spanning many dynasties. They reflect the development and changes of China ancient politics, economy, religion, culture and many other fields from different aspects with a large number of physical images and written materials, and have made great contributions to the innovation and development of China Grottoes. In 2000, it was listed as a world cultural heritage by UNESCO.