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| the Kwan-yin Pavilion |
The Dule Temple
is established in the early years of the Xuanzong reign in the Tang Dynasty
(618-907). An Lushan, the prefecture military governor, gave oath there to rebel
against the Tang Dynasty by launching the An Lushan - Shi Siming Rebellion. The
temple consists of east, west and central parts, with monks' rooms and Xanadus
in the east and west parts, and the temple gate and the Kwan-yin Pavilion in the
central part. According to documents, in the 2nd year (984) of the
Tonghe reign, the temple was rebuilt. Except the temple gate and Kwan-yin
Pavilion built in the Liao Dynasty (916-1125), other buildings in the temple
were all built in the Ming and Qing dynasties (1368-1911).
The temple gate built on low-lying stairs is
16.57 meters long, 2 bays deep and 8.76 meters wide. Two earthen statues of
Fierce-Looking Guards stand as the gatekeepers in both sides of the pylon. The
temple gate has a single-eaved palace roof, the earliest roof of its kind extant
today in China. Under the eastern roof hangs a horizontal inscribed board with
the of the temple on it, which is said to have been written by Yan Song, the
wicked premier of the Ming Dynasty.
Passing the temple gate through stairs up to
the north, there is a three-storeyed pavilion with 5 bays wide, 4 bays deep and
23 meters high. It is the oldest extant pavilion architecture in China. On the
pedestal at the center of the pavilion stands a Kwan-yin statue of 16 meters
high.
The Kwan-yin Pavilion is centered on the
statue and surrounded by two rows of pillars. The roof beams are settled around
the statue, and there is an octagonal sunk panel over the head of the statue.
The four walls of the pavilion's first floor are all decorated with color
frescoes, whose subject matters include 16 standing Arhats, a Buddha with 3
heads and 6 arms, the Ming King with 4 arms, sceneries and folk customs, which
are all masterpieces done by famous painters in the Yuan and Ming dynasties
(1271-1644). The Dule Temple was reconstructed and repainted during the Wanli
reign of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), the reigns of emperors Shunzhi, Qianlong
and Guangxu of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911).
The Dule Temple is the representative work
of ancient Chinese wooden architecture, and its superb architectural techniques
made it endure many intense earthquakes but still stand there intact. The Dule
Temple underwent several repairs after the founding of new China and is
relatively well preserved now, providing good materials for research into
ancient architecture.