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Qutan Temple
The Qutan Temple is located
in the mountain valley 20 kilometers to the south of Ledu County, Qinghai
Province.
Qutan, or Gutama, is the family name and honorific title of Sakyamuni.
According to the historical record and records of events inscribed on the
tablet, the Qutan Temple was built during the Hongwu reign of the Ming Dynasty
(1368-1644). Zhu Yuanzhang (the first emperor of the Ming Dynasty) named it
Qutan Temple and appointed Lama San Luozang responsible for it in the 26th year
(1393) of the Hongwu reign. In the Yongle reign of the Ming Dynasty, Zhu Di (an
emperor of the Ming Dynasty) ordered the nephew of San Luozang to be the
Empowerment Pure Mind Hongji Great Master, and gave him farms, gardens and
livestock as provisions to expand the temple. The temple was further expanded in
the Hongxi reign and the Xuande reign.
The temple was built within a quadrate earthen altar in front of the Qutan
River behind Luohan Mountain. It occupies 1.5 hectares with a construction area
of 10,000 square meters and is composed of the front, the middle and the back
yards. The main constructions of the temple are arranged in the middle of the
temple, such as the Jingang (Buddha's warrior attendant) Hall, the Qutan Hall,
the Baoguang (treasured light) Hall, and the Longguo (prosperous country) Hall,
etc. Other buildings such as the Imperial Stele Pavilion, the Fresco Corridor,
the Small Bell and Drum Tower, the Big Bell and Drum Tower, the Stupa, the Small
Buddha Hall, the Sutra Hall and so on are located on both sides symmetrically.
All the halls in the temple features a compact layout, and retain the
characteristics of the architecture of the early Ming Dynasty.
The temple gate is three-bay wide and more than 150 square meters in area. It
has a single-eave gable and hip roof and bulky dougong (wooden square blocks
inserted between the top of a column and a crossbeam). There are two imperial
stele pavilions on both sides of the front yard. With an area of about 110
square meters, the Jingang Hall is the dividing line and aisle of the front and
the middle yards. It has a single-eave gable and hip roof made of girder-column
structure with no dougong. The Qutan Hall lying in front of the middle yard has
an area of about 170 square meters. It has a double-eave gable and hip roof. The
plane layout of the palace is somewhat special. The front eave is three-bay
wide, and there are hidden corridors in the left, right and back. Rebuilt in the
37th year (1782) of the Qianlong reign of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), it
follows a typical layout of Lama temple.
The Baoguang Hall, covering an area of 400 square meters, is located behind
the middle yard. It has a double-eave gable and hip roof,with brick wall in the
left, right and back, and visible corridors around. The Longguo Hall, also
called the Dachi Jingang Hall, is located in the back yard. It is the highest
and the most imposing construction in the temple, and has an area of 900 square
meters. It has a double-eave hip roof with visible corridors around. The hall is
built on a spacious pedestal, with a platform extending in front and stone
railings around. Colored huge frescos are painted on the wall inside. The Big
Bell Tower and the Drum Tower lie on both sides in front of the Longguo Hall,
confronting each other. Looking down from the upper floor of the building, one
can have a panoramic view of the temple. There are four Xiangqu Towers located
at four corners of the Qutan Hall, with 9 meters in height and a square base of
about 5 meters in length and width.
The Fresco Corridor starts from both sides of the Longguo Hall, surrounding
the middle and the back yard. The huge colored frescos of the Fresco Corridor
are the most valuable artworks of the Qutan Temple and have an area of about 400
square meters. The frescos tell the life story of Sakyamuni. The colors are
still fresh and dazzling even after over 500 years. There are the sun and the
moon, stars, clouds and rains, mountains and rivers, trees, flowers, people,
animals, halls, pavilions and terraces, towers, flags and weapons, vehicles,
etc., on the frescos. The frescos of such a large area and magnificent skill
provide invaluable materials for the research into the history, archaeology and
fine arts.
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