What does Hokuriku mean?

Those who betray Lu, A takes Xin as an official for Lu, A was born in spring and summer, and Jin has no official, so he betrays Lu.

It means that people are destined to work hard in other places. In the past, China people attached importance to local family relations and had to leave their hometown.

The "Beilu" here means that the official star of the Japanese Lord is in the land of death, and there is no Lu Yuan. If Xin is an official, he was born in spring and summer, so he has no official position in Jin. So it's called Beilu.

There is a famous saying in the ancient eight-character numerology: "Rich is poor." This sentence mainly talks about the fortune of the Lord. The ancients looked at the eight characters, looked for Lu with heavenly stem, determined fate with the earth, and determined good or bad in the order of five elements, so they had the concepts of sitting Lu, North Lu and Broken Lu.

Extended data:

The so-called "chasing horses" by Marco Polo in Hokuriku means that Japanese owners rob wealthy horses when they encounter robbery from their arch rivals. For example, Jia Mu used her land as a horse and was robbed by A-B timber, not including in Mu Yi or Haimao. Japanese Lord Jia Mu and Cai Ke are equal, so they are called "chasing horses". The rest can be illustrated by examples.

For example, in Life, Ren Zi, Ren Zi, Yi Ji, Sun Zhu, and Ren Shui are officials' wealth, and Ren Shui should meet Lu in the moon. Today, the Lord, the son is born on the moon, and the water is the seven evil spirits. Let the water officials and wealth cross the sea and reach the child, but if they pass, they will be after, and if they pass, they will be after.

? References:

Hokuriku-Baidu Encyclopedia