Lam Tsuen
Lam Tsuen (Chinese: 林村) is an area in Tai Po noted for its Lam Tsuen Wishing Trees. The nearby Lam Tsuen River, empties into Tai Po Hoi.
Villages
Lam Tsuen is not a village in the political sense but rather a union of the 23 villages scattered across the Lam Tsuen Valley along with five indigenous (Punti) villages and 18 Hakka villages.[1]
Today, Lam Tsuen spreads over an area covering 26 villages:[2]
- Pak Ngau Shek Sheung Tsuen (白牛石上村)
- Pak Ngau Shek Ha Tsuen (白牛石下村)
- Ng Tung Chai (梧桐寨)
- Chai Kek (寨乪)
- Tai Yeung Che (大陽輋)
- Ma Po Mei (麻布尾)
- Shui Wo Tsuen (水窩村)
- Ping Long (坪朗)
- Tai Om Shan (大菴山)
- Siu Om Shan (小菴山)
- Tai Om (大菴)
- Lung A Pai (龍丫排), a Hakka village
- Tin Liu Ha (田寮下), a Hakka village, which was subdivided into 2 villages: Sheung Tin Liu Ha (上田寮下, Upper Tin Liu Ha) and Ha Tin Liu Ha (下田寮下, Lower Tin Liu Ha)[3]
- San Tong (新塘)
- San Tsuen (新村)
- She Shan Tsuen (社山村)
- Tong Sheung Tsuen (塘上村)
- Chung Uk Tsuen (鍾屋村)
- San Uk Tsai (新屋仔)
- Fong Ma Po (放馬莆, lit. "place for grazing horses"), a Punti village,[4] where the Tin Hau Temple and the Lam Tsuen Wishing Trees are located
- Hang Ha Po (坑下莆)
- Kau Liu Ha (較寮下)
- Wai Tau Tsuen (圍頭村)
- Nam Wa Po (南華莆)
- Lin Au Lei Uk (蓮澳李屋)
- Lin Au Cheng Uk (蓮澳鄭屋)
See also
References
External links
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Coordinates: 22°27′21″N 114°07′33″E / 22.4558°N 114.1258°E
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/7/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.