Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Monkey Peak (モンキーピーク, Monkīpīku) is a Japanese manga series written by Kōji Shinasaka and illustrated by Akihiro Kumeta. It was serialized in Nihon Bungeisha's seinen manga magazine Weekly Manga Goraku from September 2016 to August 2019.
Pic des Singes (or Monkeys Peak) is a peak in northern Algeria, northwest of the town of Béjaïa. It is located in the Cap Carbon area of the Tell Atlas range, on the Mediterranean coast. Ecology
Model of the Monkey King's homeland on Mount Huaguo, at Mount Huaguo (Jiangsu).. Mount Huaguo (traditional Chinese: 花 果 山; pinyin: Huāguǒ Shān; Wade–Giles: Hua 1 kuo 3 Shan 1; Japanese: Kakazan; Vietnamese: Hoa Quả Sơn) or Flowers and Fruit Mountain, is a major area featured in the novel Journey to the West (16th century).
When Sun Wukong rebels against Heaven, Li Jing is ordered to lead a celestial army to attack the monkey at Mount Huaguo. Jinzha (金吒) is Li Jing's eldest son. Muzha (木吒) is Li Jing's second son and a disciple of Samantabhadra and Guanyin. Nezha, the Third Lotus Prince (蓮花三太子哪吒), is Li Jing's third son and a warrior deity ...
Chessboard statue in Ban Co peak Ban Co (Chessboard in English) peak is the highest mountain in Son Tra peninsula, standing at nearly 600 m above sea level. From Ban Co peak, visitors can enjoy spectacular panoramic views over the entire Da Nang city, Hai Van pass, Lien Chieu bay, Ba Na Hills, Cham islands and the sea far away.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate; Pages for logged out editors learn more
Mount Huaguo is a popular tourist attraction, especially because of the novel Journey to the West.It has over 100 scenic spots [3] and thousands of visitors every year. The mountain has many statues based on its heroes, such as a sculpture of the head of Sun Wukong (the Monkey King), a protagonist of the novel.
Shoushan (Chinese: 壽山, also commonly known in English as Monkey Mountain or Apes' Hill, in Japanese as Kotobuki-yama) is a mountain in Gushan District, Kaohsiung, Taiwan, north of the main entrance to Kaohsiung Harbor. It was named Ape Hill by the Dutch in the 17th century to describe many Formosan rock macaques on this mountain.