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Chuen Lung

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Place in Tai Mo Shan, Tsuen Wan District, Hong Kong
Chuen Lung.
Route Twisk at Route Twisk.
Duen Kee Chinese Restaurant, a dim sum restaurant in Chuen Lung.

Chuen Lung (Chinese: 川龍) is a place in Tai Mo Shan, Tsuen Wan District, Hong Kong. The name comes from the local Hakka village Chuen Lung Village (Chinese: 川龍村).

History

Located on the hillside of Tai Mo Shan, Chuen Lung Village is one of the oldest Hakka villages in the area. The village is mainly inhabited by the Tsang Clan (Chinese: 曾氏), the indigenous inhabitants of the New Territories, whose ancestry is from Longchuan County in Guangdong Province (west of Wuhua County today), and who migrated southwards to settle in the Tsuen Wan District (including Ta Chuen Ping) .

It is said to have been founded by Tsang Tai-cheung (曾大璋) during the Zhengtong period (1436-1449) of Ming Dynasty. Tsang Tai-cheung had moved, together with his two brothers, from Huizhou to Muk Min Ha Tsuen (木棉下村) in today's Tsuen Wan area, during the Yongle period (1403-1424). He then moved to Chuen Lung several decades later. It is rumored that the village move to the hillside of Tai Mo Shan to avoid pirates.

In the late 17th and early 20th centuries, as Hong Kong's latitude was similar to that of Yunnan, where tea is produced, and the climate of the high mountains was suitable for the cultivation of Camellia sinensis, large-scale commercially grown tea plantations were found in Plover Cove and the area around Shing Mun, Tai Mo Shan. Historian David Faure estimated that villagers in Chuen Lung used to make a living by growing tea in the early years, but the tea plantations were deserted after the 1920s.

In the post-war 1950s, the British Hong Kong Government banned the planting of watercress in urban areas such as Mongkok to prevent the spread of malaria. Some newly settled villagers in Chuen Lung tried to grow watercress in the area. Due to the location of Chuan Lung, which has abundant water supply and favourable temperature on the hill, quality watercress started to be grown successfully in the 1960's. Nowadays, there are still a few villagers growing watercress in Chuan Lung. Around November after the Mid-Autumn Festival, watercress is harvested, attracting many diners to try the local fresh watercress. Compared with other New Territories vegetable species that have been lost, Chuan Lung's watercress has been preserved. However, according to the farmers, there is no one to continue the tradition and it is difficult to sustain it, so it is in danger of being lost.

Features

The Tsang Ancestral Hall in Chuen Lung is believed to have been built in around the 17th century. It is listed as a Grade III historic building.

Administration

Chuen Lung Village is a recognized village under the New Territories Small House Policy.

References

  1. ^ Antiquities Advisory Board. Historic Building Appraisal. Tsang Ancestral Hall, Chuen Lung
  2. 王玥晨 (2018-04-16). "【LCSD特約】《邂逅! 山 川 人》荃灣川龍展覽 生長中的藝術地圖". 香港01 (in Chinese (Hong Kong)). Retrieved 2025-01-05.
  3. David Faure (1984). "Notes on the History of Tsuen Wan". Journal of the Hong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society. 24: 58. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  4. 葉靈鳳 (1999). 「西洋菜」,《靈魂的歸來—葉靈鳳文集》. 廣州: 花城出版社. p. 第366頁. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  5. 李定 (1980). 〈三十年來川龍村的演變〉,《川龍邨公所落成啟用紀念特刊》. 香港. p. 第14頁. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  6. "「川龍西洋菜」". 《就係香港》. 香港街道演義 (秋): 第222-225頁. 2021. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  7. "List of Recognized Villages under the New Territories Small House Policy" (PDF). Lands Department. September 2009.

External links

22°23′35″N 114°06′41″E / 22.39297°N 114.1115°E / 22.39297; 114.1115


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