Qian Shan is full of water, and nine schools go around the river. "Scholars are noble and beautiful." Since ancient times, Chaisang has been a metropolis with many ships and businessmen. Chaisang is located at the junction of Jiangxi, Hubei, Hunan and Anhui provinces, backed by Jinjiang Lake and Lushan Mountain. It is a military town that military strategists must contend for.
Chai Sang, also known as Jiujiang, was first recorded in the Book of History Yu Gong, such as Empty Sound of Jiujiang and Crossing Jiujiang to Dongling. Later, according to "Jin Tai Kang Di Ji", Jiujiang originated from "Liu Xinsi's nine waters (i.e. Ganjiang water, Poyang water, residual water, Xiushui water, catch-up water, Xushui water, Shushui water, Nanshui water and Pengshui) flowing into Peng". The Yangtze River flows through Jiujiang waters and flows into Poyang Lake and the rivers adjacent to Jiangxi, Hubei and Anhui provinces. All the rivers belong to the sea, with huge water potential and magnificent river surface.
The development history of Chaisang is earlier. In the Xia and Shang Dynasties, Chai Sang belonged to Jingyang, and in the Spring and Autumn Period, Chai Sang belonged to Dongwu and Xichu, so it was called "Wu Tou Chu Wei". As an administrative division, Chaisang first appeared in the Qin Dynasty. Qin Shihuang set 36 counties in the world, including Jiujiang County. Since then, Jiujiang has ancient names such as Chaisang, Xunyang, Runan, Kancheng and Dehua, but the world is mainly famous for Jiujiang, Chaisang, Xunyang and Jiangzhou.
In 22 1 year BC, after Qin Shihuang unified China, the whole country was divided into 36 counties with Jiujiang County as the boundary. In the Western Han Dynasty, Jiujiang established a county named Chai Sang. In the sixth year of Emperor Gaozu's reign (20 1 year BC), General Guan Ying rode a horse to dig a well and built a city here, which was called the city, also known as Guanying City. During the Three Kingdoms period, it belonged to Wu Dong and was transferred to Wuchang County.
Chaisang was once a battleground for military strategists. From the early Western Han Dynasty, Liu Bang sent Guan Ying, a chariot rider, to chase King Jiujiang, and to the late Eastern Han Dynasty, Zhou Yu, commander-in-chief of the Water Army, trained as a sailor in Poyang Lake ... For thousands of years, Jin Goma has galloped through Jiangzhou, leaving many ancient battlefield relics. The stories described in The Romance of the Three Kingdoms, such as the war of words between Zhuge Liang and Confucianism, the gathering of heroes in Jiang Gan, and the funeral of Chai Sangkou in Wolong, are all related to Jiujiang and spread all over Kuangshan and Lishui.