Knowledge expansion:
Source:
For the first time in Qing Wenkang's Biography of Heroes of Children: "Although it is not a big garden, pavilions, trees and rocks, it is also elegantly decorated."
What's the difference between pavilions, platforms, buildings, pavilions, halls and pavilions in China?
I have been to the three famous buildings in the south of the Yangtze River, including Yellow Crane Tower, Yueyang Tower and Wangtengting, and some of them have been there twice. As far as building age is concerned, Yueyang Tower may be older, and Wang Teng Pavilion should be the latest one. Judging from the building volume, Wang Teng Pavilion seems to be the largest and Yueyang Tower the smallest (as I remember it).
However, the word "this era" is only the history of the name. In fact, the three famous buildings in the world were all built later, and some of them are even easy to rebuild, using reinforced concrete buildings or something.
There has always been a question, why are some buildings called pavilions and some called pavilions? There seems to be no difference between these buildings. Although I have talked about this before, I always feel that I am reluctant to say it, purely in words. For example, I said that the Wang Teng Pavilion has a hidden building, which is true, but later I found that the Yellow Crane Tower also has a hidden building, so it is difficult to distinguish a building from a pavilion just by the hidden building.
Some people say that a heavy house is a building, and a four-bay is a pavilion. In fact, the Yellow Crane Tower is also surrounded by cloisters, which is very open. Others said that the so-called building means that the height of the building is greater than the width and length of the ground floor, but unfortunately he didn't prove it.
After coming back from Guizhou, I have been thinking about the difference between this building and the pavilion for some reason, and I have also seen many pictures and other people's articles. Opinions, ideas, ideas, I don't know why, I always feel that there is a time and space problem here. One is the definition of pavilions in the dictionary, and the other is the changes of pavilions over thousands of years and people's cognition of pavilions.
Dictionaries are of course the most basic explanation. For example, the dictionary says that it is a heavy house, which means that the first is a house, and the second is that the houses overlap and there are houses on it. There are some buildings here.