Among them, Shandong cuisine, Sichuan cuisine, Guangdong cuisine and Jiangsu cuisine were formed in the early Qing Dynasty and became the most influential local cuisines at that time, known as the "four major cuisines". By the end of the Qing Dynasty, four new local cuisines, namely, Zhejiang Cuisine, Fujian Cuisine, Hunan Cuisine and Anhui Cuisine, were differentiated and formed, which together constituted the "eight major cuisines" of traditional China cuisine.