1. What are the three unique features of the Kumbum Monastery in Qinghai? 2. Introduction and detailed information of the top ten famous temples. 3. Introduction to the Kumbum Monastery. 4. What are the three unique features of the Kumbum Monastery in Qinghai, a famous tourist attraction in Xining City, Qinghai. The three unique features of the Kumbum Monastery are the murals.
, pile embroidery and butter flowers.
Introduction to murals: Murals, art on walls, are paintings that people draw directly on the wall.
As an accessory part of a building, its decorative and beautifying functions make it an important aspect of environmental art.
Murals are one of the earliest forms of painting in human history.
Introduction to Duixiu: Duixiu is a unique temple culture and art.
Broadly speaking, Dui embroidery is a type of thangka.
There are several types of thangka: scroll thangka, embroidery thangka, jacquard thangka, appliqué thangka and gemstone thangka.
Among them, Dui Embroidery is one of the three unique arts of Kumbum Monastery.
Introduction to butter flower: Butter flower is a special form of sculpture art made with butter.
Introduction to Kumbum Monastery: Kumbum Monastery is located in the Lianhua Mountain depression in the southwest corner of Rushar Town, Huangzhong County, Xining City, Qinghai Province. It is the birthplace of Master Tsongkhapa, the founder of the Gelug Sect of Tibetan Buddhism in my country, and is the sixth monastery of the Yellow Sect in Tibetan areas. One of the largest temples, it is also the leading scenic spot and historic site in Qinghai Province and a national key cultural relic protection unit.
It is 26 kilometers away from Xining City, the provincial capital.
Kumbum Monastery is the largest monastery in Tibetan Buddhism in Qinghai Province. It was originally called Kumbum Monastery and got its name from the large silver pagoda in the Dajinwa Hall in the temple commemorating Tsongkhapa.
Brief introduction and detailed information of the top ten famous temples - White Horse Temple White Horse Temple is located in the eastern suburbs of Luoyang City, Henan Province, and is known as "the first ancient temple in China".
White Horse Temple is the first temple built by the government after Buddhism was introduced to China.
The construction of Baima Temple is closely connected with the famous "Yongping Dharma" in the history of Chinese Buddhism.
The main buildings in Baima Temple include Tianwang Hall, Big Buddha Hall, Daxiong Hall, Jieyin Hall, Pilu Pavilion, Qiyun Pagoda, etc.
Lingyin Temple, also known as Yunlin Temple, was founded in the first year of Xianhe in the Eastern Jin Dynasty (326 AD).
The Indian monk Huili came to Hangzhou and saw the beautiful mountains here. He thought it was "a place where fairies hide", so he built a temple here and named it "Lingyin".
During Kangxi's southern tour of the Qing Dynasty, Lingyin Temple was named "Yunlin Temple".
In its heyday, Lingyin Temple had nine floors, eighteen pavilions, seventy-two halls, and more than 3,000 monks.
On the central axis of the Lingyin Temple building are the Tianwang Hall, the Main Hall, and the Medicine Master Hall.
Shaolin Temple Shaolin Temple is located at the foot of Wuru Peak at the foot of Shaoshi Mountain, 12 kilometers northwest of Dengfeng County, Henan Province (Zhengzhou City).
The temple got its name because it is located in Shaoshi Shanyin, a densely forested area.
It was first built in the Taihe period of the Northern Wei Dynasty (495).
Shaolin Temple preserves a total of more than 300 tablets and stone carvings dating back to the Tang Dynasty. One of them, the "Emperor Taizong Wen's Imperial Letter Stele", records the historical deeds of the thirteen monks of Shaolin Temple who bravely rescued the Tang Dynasty King Li Shimin. The inscription was written by Emperor Taizong of the Tang Dynasty himself.
Hanshan Temple Hanshan Temple was built during the Liang Tianjian period in 502 AD.
Two hundred years later, in the Tang Dynasty, it is said that the monk Hanshan once lived in the temple during the Tang Dynasty, so it was renamed "Hanshan Temple".
Hanshan Temple has become famous since the Tang Dynasty poet Zhang Ji wrote the poem "Mooring at Night on Maple Bridge".
The main attractions in Hanshan Temple include the Main Hall, Sutra Tower, Bell Tower, the inscription "Night Mooring on Maple Bridge", and the first floor of Fengjiang River.
Longxing Temple Longxing Temple was built in the sixth year of Emperor Kaihuang's reign in the Sui Dynasty (586) and was originally called "Longzang Temple".
At the beginning of the Song Dynasty, Taizu Zhao Kuangyin ordered a bronze Buddha to be cast in Longzang Temple and the Dabei Pavilion was built, which led to a large-scale construction. A group of Song Dynasty buildings with Dabei Pavilion as the main body were successively constructed during the Kangxi and Qianlong years of the Qing Dynasty, and there were two large-scale repairs and renovations.
Additional buildings were added and the temple developed to its heyday.
In the forty-eighth year of Kangxi's reign (1709), Longzang Temple was renamed Longxing Temple, commonly known as the Great Buddha Temple.
Qingjing Temple Qingjing Temple is also known as Aisuhazi Temple.
It was first built in 1009 (the second year of Dazhong Xiangfu in the Northern Song Dynasty and the 400th year of Muharram). The founders and renovators were all Arab Muslims.
The Qingjing Mosque is built in the West Asian style and is the oldest existing mosque in China with Arab Islamic architectural style. The Qingjing Mosque covers an area of ??2100 square meters. The main building is the gate tower, which is 20 meters high and 45 meters wide. It is constructed of rimstone and white granite.
Layer domed pointed arch.
The Jokhang Temple, originally named "Recha", was built in the 7th century AD during the heyday of the Tubo Dynasty. The temple enshrines the 12-year-old life-size statue of Sakyamuni that Princess Wencheng brought from Chang'an of the Tang Dynasty.
Later the temple was renamed "Jokhang Temple".
Zhao means "Buddha" in Tibetan, "Dazhao" refers to Sakyamuni Buddha, and "Jokhang Temple" means the temple with the statue of Sakyamuni.
There are only three life-size statues of Buddha in the world.
When the founder of Buddhism, Sakyamuni, was alive, he opposed idol worship and did not build temples to worship images.
When he was dying, Sakyamuni only agreed to make a statue of himself at three different ages and draw the statue himself.
Among these three Buddha statues, the gilt bronze statue of Sakyamuni as a prince at the age of twelve is the most exquisite and noble.
This Buddha statue later entered China from ancient India and was brought to Tibet by Princess Wencheng of the Tang Dynasty. It was originally enshrined in Ramoche Temple.
The eight-year-old gilt bronze statue of Sakyamuni, the main enshrinement of Ramoche Temple, was originally offered to Jokhang Temple and is one of these three precious Buddha statues.
Wat Pho Wat Pho is the "Temple of Reclining Buddha".
It is located at the southern foot of Shouniu Mountain in the north of Xishan Mountain in Beijing and on the east side of Xiangshan Mountain, 30 kilometers away from the urban area.
The Temple of the Reclining Buddha was first built during the Zhenguan period of the Tang Dynasty (627-649). It was originally called Doushu Temple, also known as Shouan Temple.