Zhangzhou Ancient City, located on the northern bank of the Jiulong River’s western stream, is recognized as a national historical and cultural district. This area has remarkably preserved its natural landscape that dates back to the Tang and Song dynasties, characterized by the phrase “cradled by three terraces and flanked by two rivers.” The city’s layout, designed with “rivers as walls and bridges as gates,” along with its unique “nine streets and thirteen alleys,” showcases a historic urban planning style.
Within the ancient city, you can find three nationally recognized key cultural relics: the Dacheng Hall of the Confucian Temple, a Ming Dynasty stone archway, and the Lin Clan Ancestral Hall. The distinctive red bricks adorning building facades and columns are known as smoked bricks, a hallmark of local architecture. With nearly 17,000 long-time residents actively passing down traditions, this ancient city remains vibrant and alive. Walking through Zhangzhou Ancient City offers a chance to savor its “thousand-year charm.”