Introduction of the original temple of Emperor Gaozu

In BC 195, Liu Bang, the Emperor Gaozu, put down the rebellion and made a special trip to Lu to worship Confucius. On his way back to his hometown in Fengxian County, he passed the Sishui Pavilion in Peixian County, where he used to be the curator, and invited his parents to entertain him and teach the children of the general horn to sing wind songs. This place was later called the Song Wind Station. In the first year of Xiaozong, the original Gaozu Temple was built in all countries of Liu, while the Yu Temple was built in Feng County, Liu Bang's hometown, to worship Liu's ancestors. Therefore, in the fifth year of Emperor Xiaohui, Emperor Gaozu once worked in Surabaya Pavilion, so the original temple of Emperor Gaozu was built next to Surabaya Pavilion. It was also the latest Gaozuyuan Temple in China at that time. It didn't exist after the Song Dynasty. 1996 Pei County is rebuilt at the new site. The present temple gate was inscribed by Zhao Puchu, a great contemporary calligrapher, and the main hall was inscribed by Wang, chairman of Xuzhou Book Association. The main hall is a statue of the great ancestor Liu Bang, flanked by portraits of 24 emperors of the Han Dynasty. There are towering pines and cypresses in the courtyard, engraved with a new monument of the original temple inscription of Emperor Gaozu written by Liu Zongyuan, a great writer in the Tang Dynasty.