Luding Bridge is located on the Dadu River in the west of Luding County and is a national key cultural relic protection unit. The bridge was built in the 44th year of Qing Emperor Kangxi and completed in the 45th year of Kangxi (176). Kangxi wrote the inscription "Luding Bridge" and erected a monument at the bridge head. The bridge is 13 meters long and 3 meters wide. Thirteen iron chains are fixed in the wells on both sides of the bridge abutment, nine are used as bottom chains, and four are used as handrails on both sides. * * * There are 12,164 iron rings interlocking, and the iron parts of the whole bridge weigh more than 4 tons. The bridgehead on both sides of the strait is an ancient wooden structure, with unique features and unique features in China. Since the Qing Dynasty, this bridge has been an important passage and military key for Sichuan to enter Tibet. On May 29, 1935, the Chinese Red Army of Workers and Peasants passed through here on the Long March. Commandos led by 22 warriors braved the enemy's bullets and crawled along the iron rope, destroying the enemy at the bridgehead in one fell swoop, and the Red Army crossed the Dadu River. Luding Bridge has since become famous at home and abroad.
The sightseeing spot of Luding Bridge consists of three parts. One is Luding Bridge. The second is the Luding Bridge Revolutionary Cultural Relics Museum, which displays the Red Army's forced crossing of the Dadu River and the flying capture of Luding Bridge with photos, materials and objects, as well as the inscriptions of the leaders of the Red Army at that time, the calligraphy and famous paintings of famous calligraphers and painters. Third, the "Red Army flies over the Luding Bridge Monument" and its park, the name of the monument inscribed by Deng Xiaoping and the inscription written by Nie Rongzhen. The location is in Luding County, next to the Sichuan-Tibet Highway.
that is, the iron cable bridge of Dadu River. Located in the west of Huding County. The net span of the bridge is 1 meters long, and nine chains of the bridge body are tied in parallel on both sides, and planks are laid on the bridge deck. Two iron chains on the left and right sides of the bridge railing are used as handrails, each weighing about 2.5 tons. It was built during the reign of Emperor Kangxi in Qing Dynasty. The plaque of "Huding Bridge" written by Emperor Kangxi was hung at the bridge head, and Kangxi's "Imperial Huding Bridge Monument" stood in the east of the bridge.