1.23 Du Kang Chengcang
The resources of a hundred miles are limited. Liu Bei ordered people to conduct a detailed investigation. There is no gold, silver, copper, iron and tin, and minerals. There is only river sand, gravel and pebbles. They all come with the giant horse water and are scattered on the shallow banks and cannot be taken out. The gravel, river sand, and pebbles used to build the dike this time are all taken nearby, and the cost is very low.
In addition to the wood of Xilin and the materials are complete, Linxiang is indeed a Feng Shui treasure land for large-scale construction!
The only thing that made Liu Bei happy was that it is said that river workers often find brightly colored stones in gravel. I don’t know whether it is a gem.
Before the beginning of winter, the rice harvest began to be harvested in Lousang, Licheng and the rice began.
In the past, the rice smelled ten miles away, but now it is for dozens of miles away. In a few years, Liu Bei was confident that he would make the family's rice smelled hundreds of miles away.
Lou Sang produces six stones per mu, and there is still a surplus. Licheng is slightly worse, and it is also a huge amount of five stones. The people of Licheng are very happy. A household with 50 mu of grain can get 300 stones of grain. A stone can earn 90,000 yuan! The old farmer in Huaisi said that the land capacity this year will not be fully demonstrated, and there may be an output of eight stones per mu in the coming year.
Seeing that he was sure of his words, Liu Bei would write it down for the time being.
The saying of taming a field may make sense.
When Licheng was first built, it was a rural town. The city was paved with bluestone and was equipped with large and small drying yards. The streets and alleys could also dry the grain. The new grain was drying next to the new building. The people of Xinfu smiled and looked up. Every household built a warehouse building and looked up the building, and many people were puzzled. Only when the new grain was entered into the warehouse can you know the deep meaning of the young lord. If you get 300 stones of grain a year, how can you put it down if you don’t build a high warehouse? How can you feel at ease if you don’t build a building?
Dukang's two thousand households and mountain barbarians do many farmlands this year. The food they earn does not have to be paid for land taxes. Even if there are only more than 3,000 households in Licheng and more than 2,000 households in Lousang pay land rent, 30 taxes, and the young king and marquis also get 50,000 stones of new grain!
The 125,000 stone warehouse in my home has 25,000 stone surplus grain. The remaining 100,000 stone surplus can be filled in two years!
This is not over yet!
The land rent for thirty taxes is calculated for one hundred and twenty cents per year for adults, the tuition for less than twenty cents per year for minors, and the tuition for two hundred cents per year for each household.
Adding these four items together, Shaojunhou will have about 50,000 shi of land rent this year, 500 and 400,000 quits of quits, 350,000 quits of quits, and 1.400,000 quits of household quits.
Today's grain is 300 coins per stone. After conversion, Shaojun Hou earned an annual income of 21.79 million yuan.
In addition to paying the donation fee of "63 cents per year" to the court and other expenses, Liu Bei could still make 1738 million yuan.
The donation fee to the emperor was paid 4410,000 yuan!
It's really... rich enough to rival a country.
According to the classification of cities under its jurisdiction, Lou Sang is Shangyi, Licheng is Nongyi, Xilin is Mayi, Linxiangcheng is the capital, and Du Kang is the Cangyi.
The so-called Cangyi is also called Cangcheng. It is mostly built on the key points of the mountains and rivers, and it is a major area for the border reserves.
Du Kang is a hill, which is suitable for building granaries.
Moreover, the houses started along the Dukang ditches and were built layer by layer from the foot of the mountain. The land at the top of the mountain has not yet been planned.
Liu Bei found Su Bo, and after on-site survey, he decided on the plan.
Du Kang Cang is built against the mountain and is roughly rectangular. It is thirty-six zhang long (82.8 meters) from east to west, more than 18 zhang wide from north to south (42.1 meters) and the warehouse wall is three zhang high (6.9 meters). It is built in rammed earth plate and is outsourced with long bricks.
Similar to Liu Bei's warehouse building, it can be built in four rows. Each row has two, with a total of eight floors. It can hold one million stones of grain!
The warehouse building is also eight zhang high (18.4 meters), divided into four floors, square pavilion-shaped, doors and windows, ventilation holes, grain outlets, rat-proof structures, and moisture-proof structures.
The lower floor is a warehouse, with five connected granaries arranged in a cylindrical shape, with ventilation holes under it for ventilation and moisture prevention. The bottom of the warehouse is higher than the ground, and the warehouse door is connected by steps. The second, third and fourth floors have flat seats. The first and second floors are integrated to store grain.
The second, third and fourth floors are slightly different from the Liu Bei's house: the eight warehouses are covered with solid wood to form a huge overall large flat seat. In this way, on the second, third and fourth floors, the granary becomes a pillar, and the large flat seat can be opened to traffic and horses, and soldiers come from like this. There are also covered roads connected to the city wall. Just four walls are separated into walkways and houses, and the second floor can be used as a guard camp. Corridors are also built, arrow windows are set up, and inclined ladders are set up, and the ladders are allowed to pass up and down.
The third floor is the warehouse official house, the fourth floor is the warehouse fortress, and the bed crossbows and other tools are set up to guard the city.
A cylindrical granary is a granary and a pillar. It is also integrated into one and is isolated from the outside. Even if the flat seat collapses and a fire is inflicted, the food will be fine.
In the Qin and Han dynasties, there are differences in the warehouse. "The warehouse is the hiding of soldiers and chariots", "The warehouse is the place where chariots, horses and armor are." The warehouse is the armory. "The warehouse is the hiding of grain". The warehouse is the granary.
The warehousing system was found in the Xia Dynasty. By the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period, its scale and system gradually became more and more developed. At that time, all countries had complete granary systems. They were storage institutions for grain, straw, and other materials, and they also had production functions. They were important departments to ensure the operation of state machinery. After the Qin Dynasty was unified, a granary system with a large number, a detailed system and strict management was formed. The Han Dynasty generally followed the Qin system and established a multi-level and widely distributed granary system from the court to the local government according to the administrative system.
The granary directly under the imperial court was called Taicang. There are also Ganquan Cang in Ganquan, Huacang, Xiliu Cang, Jiacang, etc.
In addition, many departments in the inner court also have their own granaries. For example, the Grand Secretary’s farmer, the Zhan Shi Cang, the Changxin Cang, the Changxin Cang, the Shuiheng Duwei’s farmer in Shanglinyuan, the Examination of Workers’ Workers’ Cang, and the Changman Cang, the Taixue’s Changmin Cang, etc.
Both the county and county levels have permanent warehouses. Those found in historical materials include Hanoi, Bohai, Jiuquan and other county warehouses. The Changping warehouses that were once established in border counties during the reign of Emperor Zhao can also be regarded as county-level granaries. The county-level warehouses also include Huan Cang, Gong Cang, Haiqu Cang, Zhu Cang, Tong Cang, etc.
In addition, there is also the granary of the border county garrison. Because it is under the jurisdiction of the Duwei, it is called Duwei Cang. Because it is located in the city where it is stationed, it is called "City Cang".
The counties and states of the Han Dynasty were parallel. Except for the granaries of the court and governments at all levels, the vassal states had granaries similar to those of the dynasty. For example: Qi Taicang. During the reign of Emperor Wen, the Qi Taicang Changchun Yu was a famous doctor, and was called "Canglang Gong". The sealing mud of "Qi Taicang Seal" was recorded. Another example: Wu Taicang. "Book of Han: Biography of Meishang": "Transfer to Suxixiang, and the land was endless, and the water flowed all over the river was not as good as the warehouse of Hailing." "Hailing is also the name of Jun County. There is Wu Taicang".
"Han Shu·Book of All Officials and Ministers": "(Dashiyuan) has a government official, and the officials are all lost, and they are evenly accurate. They are in the capital, and they are registered in the five dictators of the land and are the chief minister."
The Cang Ling had a rank of 600 stones. The Cang Chief was also called the Cang Zha, with a rank of 300 stones. The Cang, and the Chief were the sergeants. There were also the Ling Shi, the clerk, the clerk, the assistant, the Cao Shi, etc., all of whom were low-level officials. They were the same as those who set up post offices and market buildings.
Although they are all small officials who fight and eat, they are not included in the ranks. However, there are quite a few people.
"Taicang officials are ninety-nine." "There are 37 officials in the Tunyuan Tuncang, 86 soldiers, waiting for the chief, waiting for the history..." The various things in the book are clear evidence.
The importance of granaries is self-evident.
Enriched warehousing can not only calm grain prices, protect self-cultivated farmers from high-interest exploitation by landlords and powerful people, or even annexed land, become tenants or even refugees. It can also regularly distribute rice and grain to the people under its jurisdiction, such as giving rice in high age, salary and food, and helping the poor. Especially in famine years, opening a warehouse to help the people can greatly ease the people's sentiment, quell the unrest, and quickly restore people's livelihood.
There are both precedents and great uses.
Chapter completed!