There are other older photos or maps of the Kowloon Walled city showing an extension of the wall going up towards a hill on the northern side, and back. I believe this was a section of that wall.
To see similar walsl one could go to Tung Chung Fort. It's of a much smaller scale but the structure is still substancially big. Actually both sites were built in the Qing Dynasty so the craftmanship should be smilar.
If you want something more like the former Kowloon Walled City, you would have to go to Da Pang Fortress in Shenzhen.
Permalink Submitted by C on Thu, 2017-11-09 00:02.
The hill is called 'Pak Hok Shan' (白鶴山, White Crane Hill) and two rocks on it had names -- Yau Sin Ngam (遊仙巖, Visiting Deity Rock) and Kau Yi Shek (交椅石, Chair Stone, rumoured to have been used as the throne of the penultimate emperor of the Song Dynasty). Location of the triangular area surrounded by the walls is present-day Mei Tung Estate. Remnants of the hill exist in the Chinese Christian Cemetery on Junction Road.
Old photographs of the area can be seen here and here. Recent photographs are here including a photograph of Triangulation Station 124 at the peak.
Comments
Where and what is this wall?
Where and what is this wall? any ideas anyone?
I believe its part of the
I believe its part of the wall that surronded the Sung Wong Toi at Kai Tak Kowloon
Re: Kowloon Walled City
Hi There,
There are other older photos or maps of the Kowloon Walled city showing an extension of the wall going up towards a hill on the northern side, and back. I believe this was a section of that wall.
Here's one of them. Here's another.
Thanks & Best regards,
T
I had always assumed the big
I had always assumed the big rock at the top was the Sung Wong Toi Rock, but it appears they were different hills.
Kowloon Walled City
The wall was part of the Kowloon Walled City. Destroyed during the Japanese invasion.
Re: Walled City\Fort
Hi There,
To see similar walsl one could go to Tung Chung Fort. It's of a much smaller scale but the structure is still substancially big. Actually both sites were built in the Qing Dynasty so the craftmanship should be smilar.
If you want something more like the former Kowloon Walled City, you would have to go to Da Pang Fortress in Shenzhen.
T
Kowloon Walled City
Old wall in Kowloon, 1925
The hill is called 'Pak Hok Shan' (白鶴山, White Crane Hill) and two rocks on it had names -- Yau Sin Ngam (遊仙巖, Visiting Deity Rock) and Kau Yi Shek (交椅石, Chair Stone, rumoured to have been used as the throne of the penultimate emperor of the Song Dynasty). Location of the triangular area surrounded by the walls is present-day Mei Tung Estate. Remnants of the hill exist in the Chinese Christian Cemetery on Junction Road.
Old photographs of the area can be seen here and here. Recent photographs are here including a photograph of Triangulation Station 124 at the peak.