
The gateway to Lu Shan (Lu Mountain), the ancient port of Jiujiang, was used for shipping rice and tea and, during the Ming dynasty, porcelain from Jingdezhen. Badly damaged during the Taiping insurrection, it was later opened to foreign trade in 1861 and became noted for its tea bricks.
The older and livelier part of city lies close to the river, separated from the industrial section by two lakes. Yanshui Ting, the Misty Water Pavilion, is located on a small island on Gantang Hu. It was most recently rebuilt in the Qing dynasty and contains a museum showing old photos of Jiujiang. Nengren Si was founded in AD 502. Closed during the Cultural Revolution, it now houses a flourishing community of monks.
The Xunyang Lou is a modern reincarnation of a Tang Dynasty wooden tavern, which was the setting for a raucous scene in the Chinese classic, The Water Margin.