 |
| statues of Buddha in Fengguo
Temple |
The construction of the Fengguo Temple started
in 1020, and was completed in 1205, lasting 6 years. The temple has fallen into
disuse and experienced reconstruction several times. Today, the shrine of
Sakyamuni Buddha, the Hall of Amita, the Bell Pavilion, stele pavilion, inner
temple gate and the memorial archway, etc. still stay there.
The shrine of Sakyamuni Buddha is a
single-eaved building with 5 ridges, is 21 meters tall, 55.6 meters long from
east to west and 32.8 meter from south to north, and has a construction area of
1,824 square meters. As the hall utilized many mechanics principles when it was
built, it is still in a very good condition after thousands of years, showing
the high architectural level in ancient China.
The column base of the hall is built of
limestone with a planar area of 1.2 square meters. On the brick platforms north
of the hall center stand seven Buddha statues from west to east including
Sakaymuni. The one right in the middle is the statue of Vipassi Buddha, which is
9.5 meters tall, the highest among them. The Buddha statues at both sides are
lower one after another; in front of each Buddha there is two servant
Bodhisattvas of 2.5 meters tall each, and on the east and west sides of each
Buddha there are one powerful warrior attendant of 3.5 meters tall. There are
many colorful paintings of the Liao Dynasty (916-1125) on the beam purlins and
the corbel brackets inside the hall, and some of them are still in a very good
condition, among which 42 flying Apsaras paintings at the bottom of beam shelves
are obviously well maintained. Some of the flying Apsaras are holding flower
bunch of flowers, some of them are holding fruit plates in a posture as if they
are worshipping the 7 Buddha; some of them wear crowns on the head, arrange the
hair on the both temples, wear bracelets and long skirts with long ribbons
flying gracefully high in the clouds.
The walls of the hall are painted with 5
Buddhas on the east and west walls, 8 bodhisattvas on the north wall and 18
arhats on the front wall. All the paintings were painted with ease, grace,
elegance and bright color. The figures are lifelike. At the back door of the
hall there stands a sitting Kwan-yin, which was rebuilt in 1603 during the Ming
Dynasty (1368-1644), with 53 the Celestial youths of the Treasure of Merit and
dragon girls on both sides.
On the platform in front of the shrine of
Sakyamuni Buddha stand the bell pavilion of six ridges and six columns with an
iron bell in the east side, and the stele pavilion that houses two stone steles
of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911).
The hall of Amita Buddha is 20 meters wide
from east to west, 16 meters long from south to north and 9 meters tall from
bottom to the top of the hall ridge. In the middle of the hall's front corridor
stands a tablet with the name of the hall on it. A 1.3-meter-tall sandalwood
statue of Longevity Buddha stands in the middle of the hall, and the pedestal of
the Buddha has six layers and is 0.8 meters high. The east and west walls of the
hall are painted with the colorful images of Four Heavenly Guardians.
Outside the inner gate of the Buddhist
temple, there is a pair of stone-carved lions. Above the gates is hung a tablet
with three big Chinese characters that mean Big Buddha Temple, written by Liu
Zhonglin, a calligrapher in ancient China.