Qinglian Temple is located at Lingshi
Mountain, 17.5 kilometers southeast of Jingcheng City, Shanxi
Province.
Perfectly in line with the geomantic omen of
facing the mountain with the back to the water in ancient China, Qinglian Temple
oversees Lindan River and leans on a tall mountain. A stone tablet on the
mountain contains inscriptions from 543 during the Eastern Wei period. The
temple is divided into the old and new Qinglian Temple, built in 552 in the
Northern Qi and the Sui (581-618)-Tang (618-907) periods respectively.
Main constructions at the temple -- all
symmetrically distributed -- include the God Hall, Scriptures Storage Building,
Sakyamuni Hall, Arhat Hall, Underground Treasure Building and Lecture Hall, and
monasteries. The grand Sakyamuni Hall has a hanging eaved gable and hip roof
built in a style typical of the Song Dynasty (960-1279). A Sakyamuni statue sits
in the hall with his two followers, Manjusri and Samantabhadra Bodhisattvas.
Lifelike statues of gods -- 15 arhats, the Bodhisattvas and Yama Raja
-- are housed in the east and west buildings. A flat-topped cliff towers
over the temple in the east. To the south is the Kuanyue Pavilion, which
contains inscriptions by poets and scholars on its inner walls. The inscriptions
suggest the pavilion was built during the Song Dynasty. South of the temple in
the main hall is a stone tablet with a carving of a Buddhist temple of the Tang
Dynasty, which is of great historic architectural value.