& shy; Experts are identifying unearthed cultural relics. & shy; On March 16, the A9 edition of this newspaper reported the news that the immobile cultural relics registration point in Gulou district found the money brick of Tang and Five Dynasties on Beiyue Temple. Yesterday, Wang Zhongyi, president of the municipal Wang Zhizhi Research Association, reported to this newspaper: “Some more valuable bricks and pottery pieces were found Beiyue Temple.” Experts said that these unearthed cultural relics of Han and Tang dynasties confirmed historical records. & shy; Yesterday morning, the reporter rushed to Beiyue Temple on the west side of Tianquan Road (now listed as “North Temple”). “These bricks and pottery pieces were found on the road construction site of the harem site of the North Temple these two days.” Beiyue Temple people showed the reporter: 4 pieces of broken pottery printed with various patterns, some khaki, some gray; 11 pieces of residual bricks, including green bricks and gray bricks, large and thick, some with fired words on the side, some sides are engraved with money patterns. The relatively complete khaki long brick fired with inscriptions on the side is preserved, which is 27cm long, 18cm wide and 5cm thick. & shy; Ou Tangsheng, the librarian of the provincial museum of literature and history and the former curator of the Tanshi Mountain Museum, was present yesterday morning to inspect these residual bricks and pottery pieces. He introduced to the reporter that there were rope pattern plate tile in the early Han Dynasty, hard clay pot with mat pattern, square pattern clay pot and Wadang in the Tang and Five Dynasties. The remaining bricks include tomb bricks of the Southern and Northern Dynasties. The side of the brick is fired with inscriptions of brick-burning craftsmen or brick kilns; Rich tomb bricks include money-patterned bricks that imitated the five-yuan money of Han Dynasty in Tang and Five Dynasties, the Song dynasty imitated the big iron brick with money in the Northern Song Dynasty; There were building bricks in the Tang and five dynasties, including floor green bricks and City bricks, and the City bricks had two kinds of flat and concave on both sides. & shy; The director of the European Pavilion said that the Northern Temple was built by Liu Xingquan, the leader of Anhui Shouzhou army and the general of Fujian pioneer, after Wang Zhizhi occupied Fuzhou. These ceramic tiles can confirm historical records, indicating that the North Temple is located in the early Minyue kingdom of Han Dynasty. The North Temple was built in the Tang and Five Dynasties of Wang Zhizhi. & shy; Yesterday morning, the relevant person in charge of the municipal cultural relics bureau led the members of the municipal archaeological team to the scene for inspection. The relevant person in charge of the Municipal Bureau of Cultural Relics said that these residual bricks and pottery pieces showed that from the Han Dynasty to the Tang and Song dynasties to the Ming and Qing dynasties, this place had always been a living area. From the unearthed tomb bricks of the North and South dynasties, it can be concluded that they moved to build houses from other places in the later period, not from the North Temple. & shy; A person from the cultural relics department believes that the excavation of so many tomb bricks this time is consistent with the previous city archaeological team’s discovery that beimiaohou Mountain is a burial area. Wang Zhizhi could not use these tomb bricks to build high-specification buildings, so these tomb bricks had nothing to do with the North Temple. In the 1920 s, Minhou County also recorded the North Temple. (Reporter Yufen/Wen reporter Chen Jianguo/photo) & shy; Pottery with rope pattern plate tile (left) and square Plaid pottery urn in Han Dynasty.