<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" data-track="1" > Xinfu Road - transferred from the WeChat public account of "Good Mountains and Good Water". </h1>
In the Song Dynasty, Zhangzhou Yaqian built a double gate building (now the intersection of Taiwan Road and Hong Kong Road T-shaped road) and opened a double gate. To the east is Chongren Gate, to the right is Huai'en Gate, and on the top is the seal book "Zhangzhou". Civil and military officials entering and leaving the state office must pass through the double gate building. Inside the gatehouse are the Drum Tower, the Yi Gate, and the Ji Gate.
The path for the officials of the Civil Affairs Bureau to enter and exit the Zhangzhou capital is to go out of the Yi Gate in the south, fold out of the Mansion Gate in the west, and then turn south through the Drum Tower, and exit from the Chongren Gate on the east side of the Double Gate. Go through Fuqian Street (present-day Taiwan Road) to Umbrella Street (present-day Taiwan Road), turn south into Jiufu Road (present-day Gonghe Road), go east across Dongqiao Street (present-day Xiuwen Road), and then go south to Xiaying Street (now the southern section of Beijing Road) to exit the East Gate to Nanmen Xi Boat Wharf.
In the eighth year of orthodoxy (1443), the prefect Gan Ying believed that the outer gate of the fu was not suitable for deviation, and opened a new fu road (now Sixing South Road) from the fucheng to the south. After that, the officials of Zhangzhou Prefecture entered and exited the government office from Xinfu Road, and the officials of Zhangnan Road and Zhangzhou Wei still entered and exited from the Double Gate Building. In the first year of Longqing, Zhangzhou Wei also opened its own gate in the south direction, and Qi Jiguang wrote a note. As a result, FudaoWeisan Road runs parallel to the south, each dedicated.
Xinfu Road was renamed Shixing South Road in the eighth year of the Republic of China (1919).
flagging
No talent to make up for the day
Fallen into the horseshoe
Trampling and other hard work
Nuwa's heart is biased
Author: Tian Feng
Inscription: Yun Qingzi
Editor: Ah Bin
Typography: Strong tree