What does Daizong in the ancient poem Wangyue refer to?

Daizong refers to: Mount Tai

Source: "Wang Yue" - Tang Dynasty: Du Fu

How about Dai Zongfu? Qilu is still young.

The clock of creation is beautiful, and the yin and yang cut off the dawn.

How about the scene of Mount Tai, the first of the Five Mountains? On the land of Qilu, the green mountains have no end. Nature brings together all the magical and beautiful scenes. The yin and yang of the southern and northern mountains are decomposed, and the morning and evening are different.

Extended information

1. The creative background of "Wang Yue"

In 736 AD (the twenty-fourth year of Kaiyuan), the 24-year-old poet began to live An uninhibited wandering life. The author traveled north to Qi and Zhao (today's Henan, Hebei, Shandong and other places), and this poem was written during his wandering.

2. Appreciation of "Looking at the Mountain"

"How is Dai Zongfu?" It describes the excitement and wonder that I felt when I first saw Mount Tai. I was so happy that I didn't know how to describe it. The admiration is very expressive. Dai is the alias of Mount Tai. Because it ranks first among the five mountains, it is revered as the Dai Zong. "How is husband" means "How is it?" The word "husband" is usually used as a modal particle at the beginning of a sentence in ancient Chinese prose. It is a new creation and very unique to incorporate it into the poem here.

The following "Qilu is still young", it does not simply describe the height of Mount Tai from the perspective of altitude, but writes about its own experience in a unique way - it can still be seen outside the borders of the two ancient countries of Qilu and Lu Mount Tai lies far across there, and its distance highlights the height of Mount Tai. Lu is to the south of Mount Tai, and Qi is to the north of Mount Tai. Therefore, the geographical features described in this sentence cannot be appropriated when writing about other mountains.