Tianyi Ge Museum

The collection of Ningbo Tianyi Ge Museum includes ancient books, calligraphy and paintings, inscriptions, various unearthed and handed down ceramics, bronzes, jades, etc., and local crafts.

The museum has jurisdiction over Tianyi Ge and its nearby Qin branch ancestral hall, Chen clan ancestral hall, as well as Haishu District's Fu Tarsus Room, Tianfeng Tower, Baiyunzhuang, Ningbo Drum Tower and other cultural relics protection units.

Among them, Tianyi Ge, Qin's Branch Ancestral Hall, and Baiyunzhuang are National priority protected site.

That year, the eastern wall of the Tianyi Ge was blown down by a typhoon, and the descendants of the Fan family could not afford to repair it.

At the same time, the Zunjing Ge, originally located in the Confucian Temple of Ningbo, along with a collection of steles dating from the Song to Qing dynasties, was relocated to the rear courtyard of the Tianyi Ge, forming what was named the "Mingzhou Stele Forest.

It established an antiquities exhibition hall within the Zunjing Ge and appointed Fan Luqi, a descendant of the Fan family, as its director.In 1960, the antiquities exhibition hall was transformed into the Ningbo Cultural Relics Management Committee.

[3] The Zunjing Pavilion was originally located within the Ningbo Prefectural School and was built during the Guangxu era of the Qing Dynasty.

[4] The pavilion features a East Asian hip-and-gable roof and houses imperial books and Confucian classics.

Its beams and plaques are adorned with carvings of patterns such as "Fish Leaping Over the Dragon Gate," "Two Lions Playing with a Ball," "Sea Horse Riding the Waves," and "Qilin Presenting Treasures."

In 1996, it was relocated to the southern garden of the Tianyi Pavilion Museum and, in 1999, repurposed as the Chinese Local Gazetteer Archives.

Plan of Tianyi Ge Museum
Zunjing Pavilion
Mingzhou Stele Forest
Qianjin Studio
Bai’e Pavilion