Wufeng Lin Family Mansion and Garden () is the former residence and grounds of the in Wufeng District, Taichung, Taiwan. Owing to the size of the Lin family clan, the vast site can be divided into two sections, the Upper (é ÂÃ¥ÂÂ) and Lower (ä¸ÂÃ¥ÂÂ) Mansions. The Lai Garden () constructed by is commonly known as The Lin Family Garden ().
Lin family mansion
Upper Mansion (é ÂÃ¥ÂÂ)
- The Hibiscus-Mirror Studio (èÂÂé¡é½Â): A sanheyuan (ä¸ÂÃ¥ÂÂé¢) constructed of red kiln-baked bricks, it was rebuilt as the Hibiscus-Mirror Studio for use as a private school around 1887; the semicircular panchi (泮池) in the front courtyard was dug to resemble those in Confucian Temples.
- Tower of Prospective Fragrance Building Group (æÂ¯è°æ¨ÂçµÂ群): Work began sometime before 1864. The inner and outer wings of the first courtyard were completed in 1867, as well as the facade and the gatehouse to the Tower of Prospective Fragrance. The second courtyard was completed c.1883. The rear tower was completed in 1899.
- New House (æÂ°åÂÂ): In 1916, this addition was built along the southern facade of the third courtyard of the Tower of Prospective Fragrance Building Group.
- Nourishment Orchard (é ¤åÂÂ): Originally an earthen construction, it also served as a guest house and granary. In 1906, it was refitted as a pleasure ground.
Lower Mansion (ä¸ÂÃ¥ÂÂ)
- Caocuo (èÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ): The earliest building in Lin Family Residence, originally a thatched sanheyuan built in 1837.
- Gongbaodi (å®®ä¿Â第): The central courtyard built by during his enlarging of mansion in 1858, along with the facade, the left and right, inner and outer wings of the third courtyard following shortly afterward. His son, between 1870 and 1883, completed the mansion's addition with vestibules to the first and second courtyards. After Lin Wencha was killed in battle at Zhangzhou (æ¼³å·Â), the Qing court issued an edict, conferring upon him posthumously the title "Junior Guardian of the Crown Prince" (太åÂÂå°Âä¿Â).
- Great Flower Hall (大è±廳): This ceremonial hall, accompanied by an exquisite theatrical stage and outdoor seating, was used to host public banquets. Construction begun in 1890, completed c.1894.
- Erfangcuo (äºÂæÂ¿åÂÂ): Built between 1864 and 1870 as the residence for the second branch of the family.
Laiyuan
Commonly known as the Lin Family Garden, The Lai Garden, along with the Wu Garden in Tainan, the Beiguo Garden in Hsinchu (æÂ°ç«¹åÂÂéÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ), and the Lin Family Mansion and Garden in Banqiao, are collectively known as The Four Great Gardens of Taiwan (å°ç£åÂÂ大åÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ). In 1863, Lin Wenqin, having passed the County Examination, constructed Laiyuan on the foothills of Wufeng, and offered performances for the diversion of his mother, Madame Luo (ç¾Â
太夫人). The name of the gardens derives from the story of the filial Old Master Lai (èÂÂèÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ), who even after reaching 70 years of age, would still dress in gaudy clothing and entertain his elderly parents (彩衣å¨Â親). Liang Qichao, during his 1911 stay in Taiwan, composed 20 poems extolling the scenery at Laiyuan, which would late become known as "Twenty Quatrains on Historic Laiyuan" (èÂÂÃ¥ÂÂÃ¥ÂÂÃ¥ÂÂÃ¥ÂÂäºÂçµÂÃ¥ÂÂ¥). Laiyuan now serves as the campus of Taichung Ming Tai High School (èºä¸Âå¸Âç§Âç«ÂæÂÂå°é«Âç´Âä¸Âå¸).
The ten scenes of laiyuan (èÂÂÃ¥ÂÂÃ¥ÂÂæÂ¯)
- Cotton-tree Bridge (æÂ¨æ£Âæ©Â): In the early days, a wooden bridge originally spanned Washerwoman's Stream(æÂ£è¡£æ¾Â), leading to Laiyuan's entrance; deriving its name from the Ceiba trees (æÂ¨æ£Â) that surrounded it. In 1930(Showa 5), the bridge was rebuilt using cementãÂÂ
- Washerwoman's Stream(æÂ£è¡£æ¾Â)
- Five-Cassia Tower (äºÂæ¡Âæ¨Â): Rebuilt in 1906, it is named after the five cassia trees in front of its gate. The first floor was used as a sitting room for Madame Luo (ç¾Â
太夫人, Madame Lin Dianguo (æÂÂ奠åÂÂ夫人)), and the second as Madame Luo's (ç¾Â
夫人) personal opera box. Liang Qichao stayed here during his time in Laiyuan.
- Pool of Small Habits (å°Âç¿Âæ± )
- Lychee Isle (èÂÂæÂÂå³¶): An earthen terrace built in the middle of the Pool of Small Habits, topped by a stage for ç¾Â
太夫人 to watch opera. Later rebuilt as Flying Goblet Drunken Moon Pavilion (é£Âè§´éÂÂæÂÂäºÂ).
- Precipice of Myriad Cherry Trees (è¬æ¢Â
å´¦)
- Moon-viewing Peak (æÂÂæÂÂå³°)
- Thousand-Step Trail (Ã¥ÂÂæÂ¥ç£´): A path leading to Moon-viewing Peak, also known as the Cloud-Traversing TrailãÂÂæ·©é²蹬ãÂÂãÂÂ
- Pavilion of Vesperal Beauty (å¤Âä½³äºÂ)
- Veranda for Contemplating Nirvana (èÂÂæ§Âè»Â)
Other attractions
- Iron Cannon Tablet (éµ砲ç¢Â): Erected by Lin Hsien-tang, and written by the jinshi Chen Wangzeng (鳿ÂÂæÂ¾), commemorating the achievements of Lin Jiazu(æÂÂå®¶ç¥Â): repelling the various gangs of the Dai Chaochun Affair (æÂ´æ½®æÂ¥äºÂä»¶), and attacking Azhaowu (é¿罩é§)(Wufeng). According to legend, it originally possessed an iron cannon foil, but it has long since disappeared.
- Oak Poetry Society Name Tablet (æ«Â社åÂÂç¢Â): A concrete monument erected in 1921 commemorating the twentieth anniversary of the establishment of the Oak Poetry Society.
- Laiyuan One-Family Stone (èÂÂÃ¥ÂÂä¸Âå®¶ç³)
- Tablet Eulogizing Master Lin Zhushan (æÂÂ竹山夫åÂÂé Âå¾·ç¢Â)
- The 36 Stairs (ä¸ÂÃ¥ÂÂÃ¥Â
Âå°éÂÂ)
- Lin Clan Ancestral Cemetery (æÂÂæ°Âç¥Âå¡Â): Served as the family cemetery for the Upper House lineage of the Lin Clan, arranged in a large-scale Zhaomu (æÂÂç©Â) system.
- The Stone Duke (ç³é ÂÃ¥Â
¬)
- Bronze Statue of Lin Yunqing (æÂÂÃ¥Â
Âå¿)
- Oak Poetry Society Centennial Commemorative Bridge (æ«Â社ç¾é±年ç´Â念æ©Â)
Post-1999 earthquake damage
During the 1999 Jiji earthquake (known as the "921 earthquake" in Taiwan), the building sustained heavy damage.
Upper house
- Tower of Prospective Fragrance Building Group
- Hibiscus-Mirror Studio: 80% damaged.
- New House: Completely destroyed.
- Nourishment Orchard: 70% damaged.
Lower house
- Grass House: Completely destroyed.
- Residence of the Palace Guard: 80% damaged.
- Hall of Large Flowers: Completely destroyed.
- Two-Roomed House: 65% damaged.
Reconstruction work
The Lin Family Residence, after having suffered through the 921 earthquake, was under the financial support of the Executive Yuan's 921 Rebuilding Committee (è¡ÂæÂ¿é¢ä¹ÂäºÂä¸ÂéÂÂ建å§Â塿ÂÂ), the Taichung County Cultural Bureau (already in conjunction with the Taichung Municipal Cultural Bureau) are currently finished with restoration and reconstructive work in five areas, respectively the Upper House's Tower of Prospective Fragrance (work completed) and Nourishment Orchard (already open), and the Lower House's Large Flower Hall (work completed), Residence of the Palace Guard (work completed), and the Two-roomed House (work completed). Work is currently undertaking on the restoration and reconstruction of the Upper House's Hibiscus-mirror Studio, the Lower House's Grass House, and Laiyuan's Five-Cassia Tower.
See also
References
External links