It became an important land passage connecting the south of the city and promoted local commerce.
[3] Liu Bei died in the third year of Zhangwu of the Shu Han Dynasty (AD 223) and was buried in the Huiling Mausoleum built in the southern suburbs of Chengdu (in Wuhou District).
During the Southern and Northern Dynasties (around the 5th century AD), people moved the ancestral hall dedicated to Zhuge Liang in Shaocheng, Chengdu, to Huiling and next to the Han Zhaolie Temple, forming the predecessor of the present Wuhou Temple.
From the 23rd to the 24th year of Hongwu in the Ming Dynasty, Zhu Chun, the king of Shu, merged the Wuhou Temple dedicated to worshiping Zhuge Liang with the Tomb of Han Zhaolie and Huiling, forming a three-in-one situation.
[6] The terrain of Wuhou District is flat, sloping from northwest to southeast, with an average altitude of 502.5 meters.
Wuhou District has a humid mid-subtropical monsoon climate, with an average annual temperature ranging from 16°C to 18.6°C.