In the Qing Dynasty, prisoners would be paralyzed by fear when they heard that Ningguta was exiled.
After the Manchus entered the customs and established the Qing Dynasty, the prisoners who made mistakes at that time were all assigned to a mysterious place that everyone did not understand, that is, Ninggu Pagoda. Where is this place? Let's take a look at it today! Ningguta, where the Borders of the Ming Dynasty were adjacent to the Ming Dynasty before the Manchus entered the Pass, everyone knows that the general borders are that kind of deserted places, or the places where some troops are stationed after that, it is a very desolate place, so where is it?
The Shengjing Tongzhi records: "Three miles outside the east gate of the old city of Ningguta, there is a forest, named Jueluo, which is regarded as the land of Nurhaci Ancestral Dragon Xing. "From the time Chen Jiayou was sent to Ninggu Pagoda in the twelfth year of Shunzhi, it became a place of exile for felons in the early Qing Dynasty. The most famous of these is the Ding Yuke field case.
Ninguta is far away from the Central Plains Road, and the traffic at that time was extremely backward, and it was impossible to predict how many difficulties and obstacles would be experienced on the road. According to the "Miscellaneous Records of The Observations and Stories of the Research Hall", at that time, Ningguta was almost not a human world, and the exiles went, often eaten by tigers, wolves, and evil beasts in the middle of the road, and even eaten by the hungry locals, and not many could survive.
Ningguta as one of the remote and backward areas of the Qing Dynasty, because it is the ancestral home of the Qing Dynasty imperial family and received special care, the Qing Dynasty government in disguise to send a large number of different types of talents here, they not only brought the advanced culture of the Central Plains, but also brought advanced business methods - "advocating Manchu cultivation and Jia", which is the new concept brought by the displaced people to the local people.