At the end of the trip travellers might leave the City from the West or North Gate and, following what most visitors would do, climbed up the White Crane Hill for a photograph. Downhill, to boot, was the Hau Wong Shrine, then the most frequented shrine in the whole of Kowloon, which remains in existence today. Although the rumour associated with it — that it enshrined Yang Liangjie, the maternal uncle of Emperor Bing of the Sung dynasty, who fled to Hong Kong with the emperor from the Mongol army — was less than half true, this old shrine, renovated as early as 1822, was quite a nice spot for foreigners to end their adventure. It would definitely make a topic when they returned to the Victoria City!