Look at Kang Youwei's tomb and Liang Qichao's cemetery. There is a world of difference between master and apprentice!

Kang Youwei's Tomb is the graveyard of Kang Youwei, a famous politician, thinker and reformer in modern China. It is located on Fushan Mountain in Laoshan District, Qingdao City, Shandong Province. The grave of Kang Youwei's former site is overgrown with weeds.

The grave of the path in front of Kang Youwei. During the period of breaking capitalism, Kang Youwei's grave was dug up, and his skull was put in a dump truck and pushed across the street for public display. There is a label on his head, which reads: the dog head of Kang Youwei, the biggest royalist in China.

Kang Youwei's epitaph was written by Liu Haisu, a disciple of Kang Youwei, a master of fine arts. The epitaph is followed by a brief introduction to Kang Youwei's life.

Kang Youwei's grave.

Liang Qichao's Apprentice Tomb is located in the Ginkgo, Pine and cypress area in the northeast of the East Ring of Beijing Botanical Garden. The cemetery has a total area of 1.8 hectares, which is divided into two parts: east and west. The cemetery is in the east and the attached woodland is in the west.

Different from ordinary tombstones, the fonts of these words engraved on Liang Qichao's tombstones are not common Song style or handwritten calligraphy, but a square artistic font, and its style is very consistent with the shape of the whole tomb, which is obviously deliberately designed.

There is a beautiful white octagonal pavilion on the west side, surrounded by portals, platforms and domes carved with petals.

The tombstone is very wide and high, and it is engraved with the first person to hold public office.

The whole cemetery is a dense cypress forest. There are several cemeteries in the forest, including Liang Qixiong, the seventh brother of Liang Qichao's tomb, Liang Sizhong, the third son of Liang Qichao's tomb, and Liang Sizhuang, his daughter.