China Finance and Taxation Museum
The museum has five exhibition halls, namely Fortune China, China's ancient fiscal and taxation history, China's modern fiscal and taxation history, China's modern fiscal and taxation history and China's accounting history, as well as cash cows and wealth managers' exhibition areas.
The plane layout of the museum adopts the shape of big shrugs and empty cloth during the Warring States period, symbolizing the national finance. Standing on the glass railing on the second floor, we can find that the detailed design of the museum often adopts a combination of squares and circles, symbolizing the monetary form of semi-square holes in the Qin Dynasty. On the west side of the museum, the huge Yongquan waterfall, which symbolizes the rolling financial resources, is splashing; There is also a square tower shaped like a seal on the south side, symbolizing state power.
From Xia, Shang and Zhou Dynasties to Yuan, Ming and Qing Dynasties, and even during the Republic of China, all kinds of tax stamps and paper money in the later period of liberation can be seen in museums.
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