Fayuan Temple is situated in
Fayuansiqian Street, Xuanwu District of Beijing. It is the oldest extant temple
in Beijing. In 1983, it was designated as one of national key temples in the
areas of the Han nationality. Now, it is the site of the Chinese Buddhist
Academy.
Fayuan Temple was built in the 19th year
(645) of the Zhenguan reign of the Tang Dynasty (618-907) by Li Shiming (Tang
Emperor Taizong) to commemorate officers and soldiers dead in battles. In the
12th year of the Yongzheng reign of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), it
was designated as the Vinaya Sect's place where the Buddhist rites were
performed, and renamed as Fayuan Temple. In 1956, the Chinese Buddhist Academy
was founded here. In 1963, the conference of Buddhists from eleven Asian
countries and regions was held here. In 1980, the Buddhist Books and Culture
Relics Museum of China was built here, and in the same year the Statue of Master
Jianzhen was displayed here after returning from overseas exhibition. The temple
has gradually become one of research centers for Buddhist culture and
Buddhism.
Fayuan Temple covers an area of 6,700
square meters. It has a compact overall arrangement and buildings are arranged
along the medial axis symmetrically. Main buildings there include the Gate of
Temple, Heavenly King Hall, Main Hall, Hall of Great Compassion, Sutra Hall, and
Bell and Drum Towers. On both left and right sides of the Gate of Temple stand
the Bell Tower and the Drum Tower respectively. The Main Hall, which is
magnificent and sacred, houses Statues of Flower Adornment School's three saints:
Vairocana Buddha, Manjusri, and Samantabhadra. The Hall of Great Compassion
houses statues, carved stones, and artistic masterpieces. Among these statues
there stand the oldest statue in China -- Pottery Statue of Sitting Buddha of the
Eastern Han Dynasty (25-220), Pottery-bottle Statue of Buddha of the Eastern Wu
Dynasty (229-280), Stone Statue of Buddha of the Tang Dynasty (618-907), and
Steel-cast Statue of Kwan-yin, etc. They are all rare cultural relics. Moreover,
it also exhibits Buddhist scriptures, statues, and cultural relics presented by
various countries.
The ambience in Fayuan Temple is quiet and
secluded, and there stand a large number of ancient trees, including gingko
trees and clove trees as well as two Malus micromalus Makino planted by Emperor
Qianlong of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911). Fayuan Temple is also famous for its
clove trees and Malus micromalus Makino.
Fayuan Temple is now not only a famous old
temple with a history of one thousand years, but also the highest academy of
higher education for Chinese Buddhism as well as an exhibition center for
Buddhist cultural relics. Each year it attracts a large number of Buddhist
scholars and Buddhists from home and abroad.