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Photo shows symbolic architecture of
eight towers on the square in front of the Ta'er Temple. (Xinhua
Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BEIJING,
July 4 -- The Ta'er Temple is located at the southwest corner of Lusha'er Town
in Niezhong County, Qinghai Province.
The Ta'er Temple is one of the six temples of the
Gelug Sect of Tibetan Buddhism. The whole complex includes the Large Gold Tile
Hall, the Small Gold Tile Hall, the Longevity Hall, the Large Classics Hall, the
Manjusri Bodhisattva Hall, the Sakyamuni Hall, the Hall for Warrior Attendants
of Buddha, the Amitabha Buddha Hall, the Time Wheel Tower, the large kitchen,
the Eight Towers for Buddha, the Passage Gate Tower and other buildings,
covering over 600 mu (40 hectares).
Inside the temple, there are four academies, namely
the Xian (evident) Sect, the Mi (secret) Sect, the Astronomic Academy and the
Medical Academy. The academies of the Xian and Mi were the places where the
senior monks studied the Buddhist classics and doctrines, while the other two
were the institutions of higher learning to foster excellent scientific and
technical talents for the Tibetan and Mongolian nationalities. As a combination
of the Tibetan and Han forms, the complex has a unique style. The layout is
compactly organized and the towering buildings display great momentum with a
resplendent and magnificent view.
The Ta'er Temple was the birthplace of Zongkaba, the
founder of the Gelug Sect. In the 12thyear (1379) of the Hongwu reign in the
Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), Zongkaba's mother built a pagoda at the birthplace of
her son, and a tiled house to shelter it. This is the oldest religious building
in the Ta'er Temple. In the 39thyear (1560) of the Jiajing reign in the Ming
Dynasty, Monk Renqinzong Zhejianzan who was cultivating built a small Buddhist
temple at the south foot of the Lotus Flower Mountain. In the 5thyear (1577) of
the Wanli reign in the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), a Buddhist monk built an
Amitabha Buddha hall on the left side of the Daling Pagoda according to the
order of the third Dalai Lama. After that, monks and disciples of all dynasties
extended and refurbished the Ta'er Temple many times and made it more
magnificent. It attracted tens of thousands of people in different nationalities
such as the Tibetan, Han, Mongolian and so on to worship and became the center
of Buddhist activities in the northwest. It enjoys fame far and wide and is the
well-known Holy Land of Buddhism.
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Photo shows the main hall of the Ta'er
Temple -- the Large Gold Tile Hall.(Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
The main hall of the Ta'er Temple is the Large Gold Tile Hall, which is the earliest building in the temple. Covering nearly 450 square meters and with three eaves relying on the sidewalls, it is in the Han style displaying a magnificent view. The hall was first built in 1379 and it was a simple and crude house covered with tiles. Later on, the hall was expanded by the nearby Tibetans and disciples with alms. In the 50thyear of the Kangxi reign in the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), a Mongolian county official in Qinghai donated one thousand and three hundred taels of gold and twelve thousand taels of silver to cover the middle layer of the roof with gold-plated bronze tiles. In the 5thyear (1740) of the Qianlong reign in the Qing Dynasty (1644-1840), the then Tibetan King set aside 27,000 taels of silver to roof the Large Gold Tile Hall with all gold-plated tiles. On the ridge of the hall a big gold roof shaped in a treasure vase was placed, with a pair of puffing flame decorations on both sides of it. The hall is 19 meters high and the Daling Pagoda is enshrined in it. The Pagoda is 11 meters in height, gold-plated on the silver base and inlaid with various treasures. Zongkaba's clay statue is enshrined in the middle niche of the pagoda.