The Li Chengwu Han Tomb Museum, which belongs to Hong Kong's statutory monuments, was planning to build a relocation building on Tokyo Street, Changsha Bay in 1955, but accidentally found the tomb room and built the current Li Chengwu Han Tomb Museum at the original site. Because it is necessary to retain the original integrity of the tomb room, it is not open to the outside world, only the transparent glass window can be peeped into the surface, and the mirror can be placed inside the tomb room roof. Photographs and film presentations are also displayed in the exhibition hall, as well as cultural relics such as pottery and bronzeware, to understand the face of the East Han Dynasty.
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The Li Chengwu Han Tomb Museum, which belongs to Hong Kong's statutory monuments, was planning to build a relocation building on Tokyo Street, Changsha Bay in 1955, but accidentally found the tomb room and built the current Li Chengwu Han Tomb Museum at the original site. Because it is necessary to retain the original integrity of the tomb room, it is not open to the outside world, only the transparent glass window can be peeped into the surface, and the mirror can be placed inside the tomb room roof. Photographs and film presentations are also displayed in the exhibition hall, as well as cultural relics such as pottery and bronzeware, to understand the face of the East Han Dynasty.
Li Zhengwu Han Tomb Museum is a statutory monument in Hong Kong. It displays two exhibitions of "Li Zhengwu Han Tomb" and "South China Han Culture" outside of the Han Tomb - pottery and bronzeware excavated from the Han Tomb
The tomb was discovered by the government in 1955 when it was built in the flattening of the mountainous area of Li Zhengwu Village. It is inferred from the shape of the tomb, the inscription of the tomb brick and the unearthed cultural relics, etc., that the tomb should be built in the Eastern Han period, namely from 25 to 220 AD. Li Zhengwu Han Tomb was listed as a legal monument in 1988 and was permanently preserved. In order to stabilize the humidity and temperature inside the tomb and slow down the loss of the tomb, the tomb is not open to the public, but visitors can peer into the interior of the tomb through the glass embedded in the entrance of Xiandao.
The museum is located at 41 Tokyo Street, Changsha Bay, one of Hong Kong's monuments.
The tomb of Li Zhengwu was discovered in 1955 when the government leveled the hillside of Li Zhengwu Village for the construction of a relocation building. It is inferred from the shape of the tomb, the inscription of the tomb brick and the unearthed cultural relics, etc., that the tomb should be built in the Eastern Han period, that is, from 25 to 220 AD. In 1988, Li Zhengwu Han Tomb was listed as a legal monument and was permanently preserved. In order to stabilize the humidity and temperature inside the tomb, the tomb room is not open to the outside world, but the audience can peer into the interior of the tomb through the glass embedded in the entrance of Xiandao.
The Han Tomb of Lee Chung-wu is located on Tokyo Street, Changsha Bay, Kowloon, Hong Kong. The tomb was discovered in 1955 when Lee Chung-wu was built. A total of 58 cultural relics were excavated. There is no door in front of the door, no text, and the real tomb room is viewed through glass. From the font, content, and unearthed cultural relics, the tomb was built in the Eastern Han Dynasty (AD 25-220), and it is the only tomb of the East Han brick chamber found in Hong Kong so far.