Baoguo Temple (Emei Shan)

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Baoguo Temple
寺 國 報 ("Baoguo Si") in the handwriting of Emperor Kangxi (read from right to left)

The Baoguo Temple ( Chinese  報 國寺  /  报 国寺 , Pinyin Bàoguó Sì ) is one of the most important Buddhist temples in the Emei Shan Mountains in the area of Emeishan in the southwest Chinese province of Sichuan , which is one of the Four Sacred Mountains of Buddhism in China . It is a national focus temple of Buddhism in Han Chinese areas .

He was in the Wanli - era of the Ming dynasty built.

In the main hall of the temple, representatives of the teachings of Buddhism , Daoism and Confucianism were originally venerated, hence the Chinese name San Jiao Huizong . Later during the Qing Dynasty , the Kangxi Emperor changed the name to Baoguo Si. Above its main gate there is a sign with an inscription of the temple name from Kangxi (see photo).

Important buildings are the Maitreya Hall and its main hall.

In the Wanli era of the Ming Dynasty , a pure copper Huayan (Avatamsaka) pagoda was built with four thousand seven hundred small statues and an engraved Avatamsaka ( Huayan Jing ) sutra . Outside the gate is the lotus bronze bell. Poured into the bell, an agama sutra and other Buddhist inscriptions were poured with more than sixty thousand characters .

The Baoguo Temple was restored in the fifth year of the Tongzhi era.

monument

The temple has been on the list of monuments of the People's Republic of China (1-133) since 1961 . He is also on the list of monuments in Sichuan Province .

photos

literature

See also

Web links

References and footnotes

  1. Chinese Sān Jiào Huìzōng 三 教会 宗; see. Emeishan Baoguo Si ( Memento from February 11, 2010 in the Internet Archive )
  2. Emei Shan Baoguo Si

Coordinates: 29 ° 32 '5.1 "  N , 103 ° 20' 2.8"  E