"Everything is done by Han Feizi on Tibetan Studies", "The method of Yin, those who abandon the ashes and return to the Tao will break their hands." Since ash is garbage, residents will be punished by criminal law if they leave garbage on the road at will.
"On the Law of the Tang Dynasty" says: "Those who go through the wall will get sixty sticks; No matter who comes out of the water. The master has to commit the same crime. My humble opinion is: I have 60 employees to pierce the cave wall and get the dirty things out of the streets. Those who come out of the water directly are innocent, and the master can't help it, just like sin. It is said that under the' invasion of Lane Street', the headquarters merged and banned, and those who couldn't help it sat with the prisoners. "
Dirt is rubbish. According to the laws of the Tang Dynasty, those who throw rubbish casually will be fined 60 times, and those who are not well supervised by the competent authorities will be convicted together. Cutting off hands, lettering on faces and flogging are harsh enough compared with today's humane and democratic laws!
Cleaner: According to Liang Lumeng, there was a special professional cleaner in Hangzhou in the Southern Song Dynasty, called "Picking the Head".
The ancients were much more environmentally friendly than modern people, and such uncivilized things as littering were rare. As early as 8,000 years ago, the ancients concentrated garbage and used natural or excavated pits to pile it up. The quickest way to solve the garbage problem is to burn it directly, and bury it if it is not finished. Most of the remains of ancient garbage dumps are broken porcelain and lacquerware. After a spell, an antique is impossible to recover. In ancient times, there were no plastic things that could not be degraded and reused in modern times, so most of the book garbage was buried and naturally decomposed after a period of time. Feces, swill and the like are of course transported to fertile fields in the fields; Some animal carcasses are thrown into the wild and eaten by wild animals, some are buried and sometimes burned for epidemic prevention. As for metals, due to the low output in ancient times, they are basically recycled.