Huayan Temple is the largest
and most perfectly preserved temple of the Liao (916-1125) and Jin (1115-1234)
dynasties in China. It is east facing
because the sun was worshipped in that time.
Emperors in the Liao Dynasty sincerely believed
in Buddhism, so they built many monasteries. The Huayan Monastery was
originally the ancestral temple of the imperial family, offering sacrifices for
emperors of the Liao Dynasty. In the middle period of the Ming Dynasty (1368 -
1644), the temple was divided into two parts the upper and lower monasteries
and was renovated and enlarged several times to its present form.
It was the imperial
ancestral temple, enjoying prominent position at that time. Then it was
destroyed in a war. In 1140 during Kin Dynasty, the temple was
reconstructed. The upper one referred to as the Grand Hall housing
five large Ming Dynasty Buddhas, and the lower section referred to as the Sutra
Temple containing a library of some 18,000 volumes of Buddhist writings. After
several repairs in the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), the temple formed today's
scale. On top of the hall are color paintings from the Ming Dynasty and Qing
Dynasties (1644 - 1911) portraying dragons, cranes, flowers, all of which are
images often found in Chinese legends on Buddhism.
Huayan Pagoda is the second
largest pure wooden tenon and mortise structure after Yingxian Pagoda in the
country. This pagoda is 43 meters high. Under the pagoda is a 500-square-meter
underground palace, which was constructed with 100 tons of copper.
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