Qushuiting Street


Qushuiting Street.

Location

Qushuiting Street is located in the Lixia District of the historical
urban center of Jinan. It is about long and on
average wide. The street follows the course of the Winding Water
Creek that flows northwards from the Palace Pool
into the Daming Lake. On
it course, Qushuiting Street passes by the Fuxue Confucian Temple
and the Hundred Flower Pond, before it ends on Daming Lake
Road just south of the Daming Lake. The creek and hence the street are lined with willow trees along
almost the entire length of the street.

History

The street was the site of an annual festival that has been documented since the times of the Northern Wei Dynasty and continued until the beginning of the Qing Dynasty : On the 3rd day of the 3rd month of the old Chinese calendar, scholar-bureaucrats gathered at the Palace Pool to ritually cleanse themselves. This was followed by a banquet along Qushuiting Street/Qushui Creek. Cups of alcohol were floated on trays along Qushui Creek. The scholars would sit next to the creek and compose poetry. If a participant's poem displeased the other guests, he would be obliged to drink more alcohol.

Cultural Significance

With its open, spring fed water course and willow trees, Qushuiting Street is a symbol of the historical city scape of Jinan that has been described by the late-Qing author Liu E in his novel "The Travels of Lao Can", written 1903-04, published in 1907). In a description that matches Qushuiting Street, Liu E writes that "Every family has spring water, every household has a willow tree" ).