Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall was built between the late Ming and early Qing periods to commemorate Tang Tsing Lok, the seventeenth generation ancestor of the Tang clan in Guangdong Province. This grey brick building belongs to an architectural style that comprises three halls with two courtyards. The ancestral hall has been used by the descendants of Tang Tsing Lok as a place for worship, festivals and clan gatherings. The lantern-lighting ceremony for newborn male offspring is still held here annually from the twelfth to the fifteenth days of the first lunar month.

Date | 2014 to 2016 |
Place | New Territories/Yuen Long District/Yuen Long/Kam Tin/Shui Mei Tsuen/Tang Ching Lok Ancestral Hall |
object | Ancestral hall |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Reminiscences: Life in Hong Kong's Built Heritage |
Source | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Repository | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Accession No. | lcs-hkbh-0004 |
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall was built between the late Ming and early Qing periods to commemorate Tang Tsing Lok, the seventeenth generation ancestor of the Tang clan in Guangdong Province. This grey brick building belongs to an architectural style that comprises three halls with two courtyards. The ancestral hall has been used by the descendants of Tang Tsing Lok as a place for worship, festivals and clan gatherings. The lantern-lighting ceremony for newborn male offspring is still held here annually from the twelfth to the fifteenth days of the first lunar month.
Date | 2014 to 2016 |
Place | New Territories/Yuen Long District/Yuen Long/Kam Tin/Shui Mei Tsuen/Tang Ching Lok Ancestral Hall |
Object | Ancestral hall |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Reminiscences: Life in Hong Kong's Built Heritage |
Source | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Repository | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Accession No. | lcs-hkbh-0004 |
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall was built between the late Ming and early Qing periods to commemorate Tang Tsing Lok, the seventeenth generation ancestor of the Tang clan in Guangdong Province. This grey brick building belongs to an architectural style that comprises three halls with two courtyards. The ancestral hall has been used by the descendants of Tang Tsing Lok as a place for worship, festivals and clan gatherings. The lantern-lighting ceremony for newborn male offspring is still held here annually from the twelfth to the fifteenth days of the first lunar month.
Date | 2014 to 2016 |
Place | New Territories/Yuen Long District/Yuen Long/Kam Tin/Shui Mei Tsuen/Tang Ching Lok Ancestral Hall |
Object | Ancestral hall |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Reminiscences: Life in Hong Kong's Built Heritage |
Source | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Repository | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Accession No. | lcs-hkbh-0004 |
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall was built between the late Ming and early Qing periods to commemorate Tang Tsing Lok, the seventeenth generation ancestor of the Tang clan in Guangdong Province. This grey brick building belongs to an architectural style that comprises three halls with two courtyards. The ancestral hall has been used by the descendants of Tang Tsing Lok as a place for worship, festivals and clan gatherings. The lantern-lighting ceremony for newborn male offspring is still held here annually from the twelfth to the fifteenth days of the first lunar month.
Date | 2014 to 2016 |
Place | New Territories/Yuen Long District/Yuen Long/Kam Tin/Shui Mei Tsuen/Tang Ching Lok Ancestral Hall |
Object | Ancestral hall |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Reminiscences: Life in Hong Kong's Built Heritage |
Source | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Repository | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Accession No. | lcs-hkbh-0004 |
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall was built between the late Ming and early Qing periods to commemorate Tang Tsing Lok, the seventeenth generation ancestor of the Tang clan in Guangdong Province. This grey brick building belongs to an architectural style that comprises three halls with two courtyards. The ancestral hall has been used by the descendants of Tang Tsing Lok as a place for worship, festivals and clan gatherings. The lantern-lighting ceremony for newborn male offspring is still held here annually from the twelfth to the fifteenth days of the first lunar month.
Date | 2014 to 2016 |
Object | Ancestral hall |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Reminiscences: Life in Hong Kong's Built Heritage |
Source | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Repository | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Accession No. | lcs-hkbh-0004 |
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall was built between the late Ming and early Qing periods to commemorate Tang Tsing Lok, the seventeenth generation ancestor of the Tang clan in Guangdong Province. This grey brick building belongs to an architectural style that comprises three halls with two courtyards. The ancestral hall has been used by the descendants of Tang Tsing Lok as a place for worship, festivals and clan gatherings. The lantern-lighting ceremony for newborn male offspring is still held here annually from the twelfth to the fifteenth days of the first lunar month.
Date | 2014 to 2016 |
Place | New Territories/Yuen Long District/Yuen Long/Kam Tin/Shui Mei Tsuen/Tang Ching Lok Ancestral Hall |
Object | Ancestral hall |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Reminiscences: Life in Hong Kong's Built Heritage |
Source | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Repository | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Accession No. | lcs-hkbh-0004 |
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall was built between the late Ming and early Qing periods to commemorate Tang Tsing Lok, the seventeenth generation ancestor of the Tang clan in Guangdong Province. This grey brick building belongs to an architectural style that comprises three halls with two courtyards. The ancestral hall has been used by the descendants of Tang Tsing Lok as a place for worship, festivals and clan gatherings. The lantern-lighting ceremony for newborn male offspring is still held here annually from the twelfth to the fifteenth days of the first lunar month.
Date | 2014 to 2016 |
Place | New Territories/Yuen Long District/Yuen Long/Kam Tin/Shui Mei Tsuen/Tang Ching Lok Ancestral Hall |
Object | Ancestral hall |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Reminiscences: Life in Hong Kong's Built Heritage |
Source | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Repository | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Accession No. | lcs-hkbh-0004 |
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall was built between the late Ming and early Qing periods to commemorate Tang Tsing Lok, the seventeenth generation ancestor of the Tang clan in Guangdong Province. This grey brick building belongs to an architectural style that comprises three halls with two courtyards. The ancestral hall has been used by the descendants of Tang Tsing Lok as a place for worship, festivals and clan gatherings. The lantern-lighting ceremony for newborn male offspring is still held here annually from the twelfth to the fifteenth days of the first lunar month.
Date of Death | 2014 to 2016 |
Place | New Territories/Yuen Long District/Yuen Long/Kam Tin/Shui Mei Tsuen/Tang Ching Lok Ancestral Hall |
Object | Ancestral hall |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Reminiscences: Life in Hong Kong's Built Heritage |
Source | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Repository | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Accession No. | lcs-hkbh-0004 |
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall was built between the late Ming and early Qing periods to commemorate Tang Tsing Lok, the seventeenth generation ancestor of the Tang clan in Guangdong Province. This grey brick building belongs to an architectural style that comprises three halls with two courtyards. The ancestral hall has been used by the descendants of Tang Tsing Lok as a place for worship, festivals and clan gatherings. The lantern-lighting ceremony for newborn male offspring is still held here annually from the twelfth to the fifteenth days of the first lunar month.
Date | 2014 to 2016 |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Reminiscences: Life in Hong Kong's Built Heritage |
Source | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Accession No. | lcs-hkbh-0004 |
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall was built between the late Ming and early Qing periods to commemorate Tang Tsing Lok, the seventeenth generation ancestor of the Tang clan in Guangdong Province. This grey brick building belongs to an architectural style that comprises three halls with two courtyards. The ancestral hall has been used by the descendants of Tang Tsing Lok as a place for worship, festivals and clan gatherings. The lantern-lighting ceremony for newborn male offspring is still held here annually from the twelfth to the fifteenth days of the first lunar month.
Date | 2014 to 2016 |
Media Type | Photo |
Material Type | Image |
Place | New Territories/Yuen Long District/Yuen Long/Kam Tin/Shui Mei Tsuen/Tang Ching Lok Ancestral Hall |
Object | Ancestral hall |
Collection | Reminiscences: Life in Hong Kong's Built Heritage |
Source | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Repository | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Accession No. | lcs-hkbh-0004 |
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall was built between the late Ming and early Qing periods to commemorate Tang Tsing Lok, the seventeenth generation ancestor of the Tang clan in Guangdong Province. This grey brick building belongs to an architectural style that comprises three halls with two courtyards. The ancestral hall has been used by the descendants of Tang Tsing Lok as a place for worship, festivals and clan gatherings. The lantern-lighting ceremony for newborn male offspring is still held here annually from the twelfth to the fifteenth days of the first lunar month.
Date | 2014 to 2016 |
Place | New Territories/Yuen Long District/Yuen Long/Kam Tin/Shui Mei Tsuen/Tang Ching Lok Ancestral Hall |
Object | Ancestral hall |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Reminiscences: Life in Hong Kong's Built Heritage |
Source | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Repository | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Accession No. | lcs-hkbh-0004 |
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall was built between the late Ming and early Qing periods to commemorate Tang Tsing Lok, the seventeenth generation ancestor of the Tang clan in Guangdong Province. This grey brick building belongs to an architectural style that comprises three halls with two courtyards. The ancestral hall has been used by the descendants of Tang Tsing Lok as a place for worship, festivals and clan gatherings. The lantern-lighting ceremony for newborn male offspring is still held here annually from the twelfth to the fifteenth days of the first lunar month.
Date | 2014 to 2016 |
Place | New Territories/Yuen Long District/Yuen Long/Kam Tin/Shui Mei Tsuen/Tang Ching Lok Ancestral Hall |
Object | Ancestral hall |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Reminiscences: Life in Hong Kong's Built Heritage |
Source | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Repository | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Accession No. | lcs-hkbh-0004 |
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall was built between the late Ming and early Qing periods to commemorate Tang Tsing Lok, the seventeenth generation ancestor of the Tang clan in Guangdong Province. This grey brick building belongs to an architectural style that comprises three halls with two courtyards. The ancestral hall has been used by the descendants of Tang Tsing Lok as a place for worship, festivals and clan gatherings. The lantern-lighting ceremony for newborn male offspring is still held here annually from the twelfth to the fifteenth days of the first lunar month.
Date | 2014 to 2016 |
Place | New Territories/Yuen Long District/Yuen Long/Kam Tin/Shui Mei Tsuen/Tang Ching Lok Ancestral Hall |
Object | Ancestral hall |
Media Type | Photo |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Reminiscences: Life in Hong Kong's Built Heritage |
Source | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Repository | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Accession No. | lcs-hkbh-0004 |
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall was built between the late Ming and early Qing periods to commemorate Tang Tsing Lok, the seventeenth generation ancestor of the Tang clan in Guangdong Province. This grey brick building belongs to an architectural style that comprises three halls with two courtyards. The ancestral hall has been used by the descendants of Tang Tsing Lok as a place for worship, festivals and clan gatherings. The lantern-lighting ceremony for newborn male offspring is still held here annually from the twelfth to the fifteenth days of the first lunar month.
Date | 2014 to 2016 |
Place | New Territories/Yuen Long District/Yuen Long/Kam Tin/Shui Mei Tsuen/Tang Ching Lok Ancestral Hall |
Object | Ancestral hall |
Media Type | Photo |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Reminiscences: Life in Hong Kong's Built Heritage |
Source | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Repository | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Accession No. | lcs-hkbh-0004 |
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall was built between the late Ming and early Qing periods to commemorate Tang Tsing Lok, the seventeenth generation ancestor of the Tang clan in Guangdong Province. This grey brick building belongs to an architectural style that comprises three halls with two courtyards. The ancestral hall has been used by the descendants of Tang Tsing Lok as a place for worship, festivals and clan gatherings. The lantern-lighting ceremony for newborn male offspring is still held here annually from the twelfth to the fifteenth days of the first lunar month.
Date | 2014 to 2016 |
Place | New Territories/Yuen Long District/Yuen Long/Kam Tin/Shui Mei Tsuen/Tang Ching Lok Ancestral Hall |
Object | Ancestral hall |
Media Type | Photo |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Reminiscences: Life in Hong Kong's Built Heritage |
Source | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Repository | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Accession No. | lcs-hkbh-0004 |
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall was built between the late Ming and early Qing periods to commemorate Tang Tsing Lok, the seventeenth generation ancestor of the Tang clan in Guangdong Province. This grey brick building belongs to an architectural style that comprises three halls with two courtyards. The ancestral hall has been used by the descendants of Tang Tsing Lok as a place for worship, festivals and clan gatherings. The lantern-lighting ceremony for newborn male offspring is still held here annually from the twelfth to the fifteenth days of the first lunar month.
Date | 2014 to 2016 |
Place | New Territories/Yuen Long District/Yuen Long/Kam Tin/Shui Mei Tsuen/Tang Ching Lok Ancestral Hall |
Object | Ancestral hall |
Media Type | Photo |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Reminiscences: Life in Hong Kong's Built Heritage |
Source | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Repository | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Accession No. | lcs-hkbh-0004 |
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall was built between the late Ming and early Qing periods to commemorate Tang Tsing Lok, the seventeenth generation ancestor of the Tang clan in Guangdong Province. This grey brick building belongs to an architectural style that comprises three halls with two courtyards. The ancestral hall has been used by the descendants of Tang Tsing Lok as a place for worship, festivals and clan gatherings. The lantern-lighting ceremony for newborn male offspring is still held here annually from the twelfth to the fifteenth days of the first lunar month.
Date | 2014 to 2016 |
Place | New Territories/Yuen Long District/Yuen Long/Kam Tin/Shui Mei Tsuen/Tang Ching Lok Ancestral Hall |
Object | Ancestral hall |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Reminiscences: Life in Hong Kong's Built Heritage |
Source | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Repository | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Accession No. | lcs-hkbh-0004 |
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall
Tang Tsing Lok Ancestral Hall was built between the late Ming and early Qing periods to commemorate Tang Tsing Lok, the seventeenth generation ancestor of the Tang clan in Guangdong Province. This grey brick building belongs to an architectural style that comprises three halls with two courtyards. The ancestral hall has been used by the descendants of Tang Tsing Lok as a place for worship, festivals and clan gatherings. The lantern-lighting ceremony for newborn male offspring is still held here annually from the twelfth to the fifteenth days of the first lunar month.
Date | 2014 to 2016 |
Place | New Territories/Yuen Long District/Yuen Long/Kam Tin/Shui Mei Tsuen/Tang Ching Lok Ancestral Hall |
Object | Ancestral hall |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Reminiscences: Life in Hong Kong's Built Heritage |
Source | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Repository | Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Antiquities and Monuments Office |
Accession No. | lcs-hkbh-0004 |
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