Suzhou, (Chinese: 宿州; pinyin: Sùzhōu) formerly romanized as Suchow,[3] is a prefecture-level city in northern Anhui, China.
The Tuohe was formerly a left tributary of the Huai River, while the latter is a modern artificial canal, but now both drain into Hongze Lake.
It borders the prefectural cities of Huaibei and Bengbu to the southwest and south respectively, and the provinces of Jiangsu to the east, Shandong to the north, and Henan to the northwest.
Suzhou has a monsoon-influenced, humid subtropical climate (Köppen Cwa), with four distinct seasons.
In Suzhou, this festival is celebrated by offering food and burning incense on a table and baijiu on the floor to worship the gods.
It is a typical Huizhou building, with white walls, black tiles and horse head walls, Zhongkui Hall in the courtyard and corridor, towering towers and pavilions, small bridges and flowing water houses, strange rocks, trees, and a total area of more than 3,000 square meters, with a total construction area of more than 1,000 square meters, of which the main exhibition hall - "Zhong Kui Wine Culture Museum" has an exhibition area of more than 500 square meters, consisting of a gatehouse, curved corridors and the main exhibition hall.