Eight Hutongs

Eight alleys used to be synonymous with yanyanhualiu lane, north of xizhushikou street and south of tieshuxie street. From west to East, they are Baishun lane, Yanzhi lane, hanjiatan lane, shannxianxiang lane, Shitou lane, wangguangfu Xie street, Zhujia lane and lishamoo lane. As a matter of fact, the "eight Alleys" mentioned by the old Beijing people do not refer specifically to these eight streets and alleys, but generally refer to the Dashilan area outside the front gate, because there are nearly 100 brothels outside these eight alleys and alleys. Today, "Bada Hutong" is the residence of ordinary people. From the buildings of some old houses and buildings, we can still vaguely understand the style of that year.

Eight Hutongs

Eight alleys is a novel written by Gao Yang.

brief introduction

Eight hutongs reappear the farce of the Northern Warlords in the early Republic of China

 

content

"Eight Alleys" is a geographical term left over from the time-honored City, and also used to be a synonym for fireworks and willow lane. This novel takes the eight hutongs as the stage, and reproduces the most absurd farce of the Northern Warlords in the early years of the Republic of China.

 

Address: West of Dashilan Guanyin temple, north of xizhushikou street and south of tieshuxie street, qianmenwai, Xicheng District, Beijing

Longitude: 116.38982534409

Latitude: 39.891826241726

Tour time: 2-3 hours, tour with Dashilan

Traffic information: take bus No.2, 5, 8, 17, 20, 22, 48, 59, 66, 67, 69, 71, 82, 120, 126, 201, 203, 301, 626, 646, 690, 692, 723, 729, special 4, special 7, special 11, BRT No.1, special 1, special 2 to Dalian or Qianmen station

Ticket information: Free

Opening hours: all day

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