m̌ ḫ

m̌ ḫ club

Posted: 01 Apr 2012


Taken: 01 Apr 2012

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Film Photography Film Photography


Nikon Nikon



Keywords

UNESCO ⵢⵓⵏⵉⵙⴽⵓ
China 中国 Čína
Fujian Earthen Towers 土楼 Tǔ Lóu
Fujian 福建
2011
Nikon FM2
b&w
analogue
35mm
tribal
people
Hakka people 客家
portrait
Nikon
film photography
Asia


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Private tulou

Private tulou
Fujian Tulou (福建土楼 - earthen towers) is a type of Chinese rural dwellings of the Hakka and Minnan people in the mountainous areas in southeastern Fujian, China. They were mostly built between the 12th and the 20th centuries.

A tulou is usually a large, enclosed and fortified earth building, most commonly rectangular or circular in configuration, with very thick load-bearing rammed earth walls between three and five stories high and housing up to 80 families. Smaller interior buildings are often enclosed by these huge peripheral walls which can contain halls, storehouses, wells and living areas, the whole structure resembling a small fortified city.
Tulous usually have only one main gate, guarded by wooden doors reinforced with an outer shell of iron plate. The top level of these earth buildings has gun holes for defensive purposes.

A total of 46 Fujian Tulou sites have been inscribed in 2008 by UNESCO as World Heritage Site, as "exceptional examples of a building tradition and function exemplifying a particular type of communal living and defensive organization [in a] harmonious relationship with their environment".

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