The poems about earth buildings are as follows:
1. The first one of "Qijue·Tulou". The Hakka customs in Tulou have gone through thousands of years of ups and downs. The rammed concrete wall is as strong as iron, preventing chaos and theft.
2. The second part of "Qijue·Tulou". The thousand-year-old scholar is known as the Confucian scholar, and the atmosphere of the Chaoyuan Dynasty is complete upstairs. The mountains serve as screens and the clouds look like canopies; the water serves as curtains and rocks form the river. The layers of shadow columns are turned around, and the incense pillars are connected step by step. Once the heart of the Patriarch comes out, there is no earthly matter that can be equal to one's shoulders.
3. The third part of "Qijue·Tulou". The romance of EMI lasts forever, and the folk songs bring endless benefits. It is difficult to describe Zi You's writing style in full, and Kang Le's writings are rich in poetry. There are sacrificial cups in every posthumous chapter, and the ancient relics are intact. If you want to know the future of the Taishou Tower, don’t be afraid of unraveling the trap.
4. "Jinshi Building" Earth buildings have emerged in large numbers over the past century and have become world-famous. Genealogy gives birth to new concepts, and history books are full of old family voices. The wind blows the jade dew, adding fragrance, and the sun shines on the vermilion fence, making it too clear. From then on, his poetry flourished, and his articles were not only good at the city.
Expand: Earth Building
Earth building refers to a type of building mainly distributed in southwestern Fujian that is suitable for large families to live in and has strong defensive properties. It is made of earth, wood, stone and bamboo. The main building material is a two-story house made of unbaked soil mixed with a certain proportion of sandy clay and clayey sand, and rammed with sandwich panels. According to the explanation of "Modern Chinese Dictionary", the so-called "building" refers to "a house with two floors or more."
According to this, a one-story house, even if it uses raw earth walls as load-bearing walls and wood as columns and beams, cannot be called an earth building, but can only be called an earth house. Tulou is a unique large-scale residential form in the world and is known as the treasure of traditional Chinese residential buildings. Tulou are large-scale residential buildings that use raw earth as the main building material, combine raw earth with wooden structures, and use stone to varying degrees.
Among them, the Fujian earth buildings are the ones with the widest distribution, the largest number, the richest categories, and the best preservation. There are more than 3,000 Fujian earth buildings that have been strictly recognized as earth buildings, mainly distributed in Yongding County, Longyan, Fujian Province, Nanjing County and Hua'an County, Zhangzhou, Fujian Province. In folk proverbs, "Tulou" is also the abbreviation of "Tulou". Compared with "Western-style house", it generally refers to a house without central heating and gas pipelines.
In July 2008, China's "Fujian Earth Buildings" were officially included in the "World Heritage List" at the 32nd World Heritage Conference held in Quebec City, Canada.