Misplaced Pages

Five Lakes (China)

Article snapshot taken from[REDACTED] with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Chinese geographical concept
West Lake in Hangzhou, at night

The Five Lakes or Wu Hu (Chinese: 五湖; pinyin: wǔhú), is a Chinese historical and geographical concept that has been used to describe various lakes in China.

The Five Lakes most commonly refer to are five freshwater lakes in eastern and central China: Lake Tai in Jiangsu and Zhejiang, Hongze Lake in Jiangsu, Lake Chao in Anhui, Poyang Lake in Jiangxi, and Dongting Lake in Hunan.

In several ancient texts, including the Rites of Zhou and Records of the Grand Historian, the term was used to describe only Lake Tai. Various sources have described other lakes as the Five Lakes. One European 19th century encyclopedia identifies West Lake in Zhejiang as one of the Five Lakes in place of Lake Chao.

Idiomatic expression

In modern parlance, the idiom the "five lakes and four seas" is used to describe a vast domain, such as the entire country or the entire world.

See also

References

  1. (Chinese)中华五湖
  2. (Chinese)史記今註, Volume 6
  3. (Chinese) "五湖" 中國古代地名大詞典
  4. Georg Lehner, China in European Encyclopaedias, 1700-1850 p. 106
  5. Tan Chung, Chinese say all within four seas are brothers and sisters Shanghai Daily 2013-12-07
Lakes of China
Five Great Lakes
Notable freshwater lakes
Notable salt lakes
National Parks
Protected wetlands
Nature Reserves
Major urban lakes
Reservoirs
image Lakes portal flag China portal
Category:
Five Lakes (China) Add topic