Ermei Bookstore is now built as a Fujian Folklore Hall, and the exhibition hall is free to visit. The interior mainly displays some Ming and Qing styles of home, clothing, antiques, etc., and the space is limited and cannot cover gossip folk culture. The old building itself is a boutique art, you can pay attention to the garden design is also very thoughtful, pay attention to viewing, find out the characteristics.
MoreErmei Book House was announced as a national key cultural relic protection unit in 2006 and is now used as the Fujian Folk Museum. Located at No. 25 on the south side of the western section of Langguan Lane, it was the residence of Lin Xingzhang, a Jinshi in the sixth year of Daoguang in the Qing Dynasty (1826). It was named after the two plum trees planted in the courtyard. It was first built in the late Ming Dynasty and was renovated several times during the Daoguang and Tongzhi periods of the Qing Dynasty. It faces south and north, with five entrances in front, back, left and right, covering an area of 2,434 square meters, and connecting Langguan Lane to Ta Lane.
The courtyard has six doors facing the street. The main hall is divided into front and back halls by a colorful gold screen door. The hall is high and spacious, and can accommodate a seven-layer table. The window lattices of the side rooms are decorated with various patterns made of wood lattice patterns. The doors, windows, wall panels, etc. are all made of nanmu. The second entrance is roughly the same as the first entrance. Each entrance is separated by a wall, and there are tortoise pavilions in the open air of the corridor to shelter from the rain.
Outside the east wall of the main building is the "Ermei Book House", with two plum trees in front of it, forming a courtyard of its own. There is a gray snow cave on the east side of the Ermei Book House, called the "Seven Star Cave". The third entrance is the flower hall, and all doors, windows, walls and panels are made of nanmu. The doors and windows are double-layered, with window paper in winter and window screens in summer; the wall panels and the upper blocking boards of the door panels are painted with trees, flowers, birds and drama stories. Two ancient pavilions were built in the small garden in front of the hall, one of which is a hexagonal half-side pavilion, and there is a lychee tree and a palm tree that are more than a hundred years old. Lin Huimin, an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, once lived in this courtyard.
Ermei Bookstore is now built as a Fujian Folklore Hall, and the exhibition hall is free to visit. The interior mainly displays some Ming and Qing styles of home, clothing, antiques, etc., and the space is limited and cannot cover gossip folk culture. The old building itself is a boutique art, you can pay attention to the garden design is also very thoughtful, pay attention to viewing, find out the characteristics.
Ermei Bookstore entered from Langguan Lane and then came out from Tower Lane. The current Ermei Bookstore is the Fujian Provincial Folk Museum. The house of Changlin Xingzhang of Fengchi College, Fujian was built at the end of Ming Dynasty. The area of the site is 2434 square meters. It is named after the planting of two trees in front of the bookstore.
Fuzhou Ermei Bookstore is located at No. 25 Guanxiang Lane, Sanfangqixiang. Now it is the back door of Fujian Folk Custom Museum. It is the physical and picture display of folk customs in Fujian. It is very interesting.
Just near the north exit of Sanfangqixiang, walk into the first alley on the left hand side, and the visitor center is not far old. It has now been converted into a Fujian Folk Museum. Some wax figures display Fujian folk customs characteristics.
Ermei Bookstore was built in the Ming Dynasty and is a well-preserved ancient five-in-one compound. Because the owner planted two plum flowers in front of his study, he took the name of "Ermei Bookstore". Interestingly, the rockery snow cave as the passage, can play a ventilation role, which is also a typical representative of the residential houses in Fuzhou during the Ming and Qing Dynasties. However, the previous owner of this house does not belong to a familiar name, it should be said that the fame is not big enough.
Ermei Bookstore is in the Fujian Folk Culture Museum, and there is no need to pay the admission fee. It shows the folk customs and traditional living habits of Futong Province, and has a little understanding of daily life here.