Daci'en Temple is located in the
southern suburb of Xi'an City, Shaanxi Province, originally Jinchang Lane (the
First Street of Capital's East) in the southeast of Chang'an City, the capital
of the Tang Dynasty (618-907). It was the largest temple in China's Tang Dynasty
as well as one of the three Buddhist scriptures translation places of Chang'an
City in the Tang Dynasty.
Daci'en Temple was built in the 22nd year
(648) of the Zhenguan reign of the Tang Dynasty by Crown Prince Li Zhi in order
to mourn for his mother. Therefore, it is named Daci'en (Great Maternal Love).
Since the Tang Dynasty, Daci'en Temple has kept its prosperity for more than
1,300 years. Its history is long and glorious.
Daci'en Temple was the largest-scaled temple
in the Tang Dynasty, covering an area of 2,475 square meters, and consisted of
more than ten courtyards. Now, the extant area of this temple is just that of
the West Pagoda Yard in the Tang Dynasty. The present Daci'en Temple sits back
to the north and faces to the south, and consists of the following main
buildings: Gate of the Temple, Bell and Drum Towers, Main Hall, Sutra Hall,
Buddha-worshipping Hall, etc.
Dayan Pagoda (the Big Wild Goose Pagoda), a
famous Buddhist pagoda in China, is located on the most northern point of this
temple, and was built in 652. It is said that it was built by Xuanzang (Tang
Sanzang), the first abbot of Daci'en Temple when he came back to China after the
pilgrimage for Buddhist scriptures in order to keep sutras and figures of Buddha
brought back to China from India. This pagoda is totally an imitation of India's
pagoda. Built all by bricks, it is 60 meters in height, and has seven storeys.
The body of the pagoda is in the shape of cone. Now, Dayan Pagoda has become a
symbolic building of Xi'an City.
Daci'en Temple holds an important position
in China's translation and Buddhist history. In order to invite Xuanzhan to act
as Daci'en Temple's abbot, the Tang Empire issued a special order to build the
Buddhist Scriptures Translation Hall where Xuanzang presided over translation of
Buddhist scriptures and expounded Buddhist doctrines afterwards and made great
contributions to China's sutra translation.