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Exploring a Northern Landlord's Manor
Dizhu, or the landlords, were the backbone of feudal
society before 1949 in China. After the founding of New China, the communist
government confiscated their land and possessions which were presumably
accumulated by forced slavery and bloody exploitation. The landlords were judged
by the working class and virtually deprived of their privileges they had enjoyed
over the centuries.
Though the class has disappeared, their grand manors have now become a hot
destination for visitors who, in an ironic way, expect to explore the luxuriant
life of these landlords, or at least to compare modern lifestyles to that of the
dizhus.
The Mou's manor, home of an eminent northern landlord in Qixia City, Shandong
province, is one of the nostalgic places where you can see the lifestyle of a
landlord's family.
The manor, the extant best-preserved landlord manor in China and the largest
of its kind in Northern China, belonged to the Mou's Family. In its prime, the
family owned some 4,000 hectares of farmland and 8,000 hectares of mountains,
which annually generated more than 3.3 million kilograms of grain.


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