Fung Kat Heung

Fung Kat Heung (Chinese: 逢吉鄉) is a village in the Kam Tin area of Yuen Long District, Hong Kong.

He was the Commander-in-Chief of the Frontier Defence of the Third Route Army of Guangdong and Guangxi (粵桂邊防第三路軍總司令), had armed confrontations with the renowned generals Bai Chongxi and Li Zongren in 1925, and later fled to Hong Kong.

It is built in a row of three houses separated by two courtyards blending traditional Hakka architecture with western design elements.

The House's main building is a two-story structure having a rectangular hall surrounded by a U-shaped unit of living-rooms with a courtyard separating it.

The building is constructed of green bricks having its walls supporting part of its pitched roofs of timber rafters, purlins and clay tiles.

The four characters (宣威馳譽) by Chinese politician Li Yuanhong still hang in the living room of the general’s house.

Miu Kok Yuen is a Buddhist nunnery and martyrs' grave built in 1936 by the Tang (鄧) clan of Kam Tin (錦田) in commemoration of the Punti and other indigenous inhabitants of the New Territories who protested British colonial rule and died fighting in the Six-Day War of 1899.

[5] This communal grave at Fung Kat Heung is the largest in the New Territories, measuring about 15 metres across and bearing the Chinese inscription 'Six days of outstanding bravery'.

Main building of the General House in Fun Kat Heung
Shen Hongying (1871–1938)
Shum Ancestral Hall of the General House, in Fung Kat Heung
Hip Wai House of the General House in Fung Kat Heung
Nunnery at Miu Kok Yuen, Fung Kat Heung
Martyrs Grave at Mui Kok Yuen
Field of water hyacinth at Fung Kat Heung
View from Kai Kung Leng ; trailhead for Kai Kung Leng at Fung Kat Heung