In the images sent back by the probe, it is clearly visible.
Whether it is the ruins and broken walls near the main hall, or the few relatively intact low buildings, they bear no trace of ancient Sichuan architecture style.
Instead, there's an abundance of the 'white walls and black tiles' previously mentioned by Professor Huang, along with numerous buildings in the horse-head wall style.
The horse-head wall is precisely the most representative style of Hui-style architecture.
Hui-style architecture is one of the most significant schools of ancient Huaxia architecture, with an extremely important status.
Of course.
It is a general term and does not refer solely to the architecture of Huizhou Province.
Hui-style architecture mainly prevailed in the upper reaches of the Qiantang River, the Xin'an River basin, Wuzhou and Quzhou in Western Zhejiang, and the Pan-Huizhou Region.
That is, in the eastern part of the Huaxia territory.
