Purple Mountain
Purple Mountain | |
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Zijin Mountain | |
View from the Purple Mountain Observatory | |
Highest point | |
Elevation | 448.2 m (1,470 ft) [1] |
Coordinates | 32°05′N 118°48′E / 32.083°N 118.800°ECoordinates: 32°05′N 118°48′E / 32.083°N 118.800°E |
Geography | |
Purple Mountain |
Purple Mountain or Zijin Shan (Chinese: 紫金山, Zĭjīnshān, lit. "Purple-Gold Mountain") is located on the eastern side of Nanjing in Jiangsu province, China. It is 448.2 m[1] (1467 ft) high, with the lowest point 30 m (98 ft). Its peaks are often found enveloped in mysterious purple and golden clouds at dawn and dusk, hence its name.
A small mountain with an area about 20 square kilometres (4,900 acres), Purple Mountain is a mountain related to many historical events of both ancient and modern China. It was originally known as Bell Mountain (t 鐘山, s 钟山, Zhōngshān) and also became known as Mount Jiang (t 蔣山, s 蒋山, p Jiǎngshān) after Sun Quan named Jiang Ziwen, an Eastern Han official whose spirit was said to haunt the site, as the mountain's god during the Three Kingdoms era. The name Zijin (紫金) is meaning "copper" - when the copper is pure, it will be purple, so in Chinese it also call purple-gold. With the purple rock on the mountain, it also name Mount Jinling (金陵山), Jinling is meaning "the mount of purple-gold". It is the origin of the nick name Jinling (金陵) of Nanking city. At Ming dynasty, it also name Mount Shenlie (神烈山).
More than 200 heritage and scenic tourist sites are now located in or around the mountain, among which include three national historical sites, nine provincial historical sites, and 33 prefectural historical sites. Located in or close to the hillside of Purple-Gold Mountain, there are also about a dozen national research institutes and universities.
Purple Mountain has 621 species of vascular plants, from 383 genera, 118 families (including 78 cultivated species).
See also
References
- 1 2 "测绘局公布盘山等第二批31座著名风景名胜山峰高程新数据". The central people's government of the people's republic of China (in Chinese). 2008-09-28. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
External links
- Purple-Gold Mountain Observatory the first and largest observatory of China, in Chinese
- Location List of Imperial Tombs of the Ming and Qing Dynasties, one UNESCO World Heritage Site
- Zhongshan Journal
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