The Five-Pagoda Temple is situated at
Xizhimen Wai in Haidian District of Beijing. Its original name was the Temple of
True Awakening (Zhen Jue Temple), which changed to the Temple of Great Righteous
Awakening (Da Zhengjue Temple) after renovation in 1761. Today, however, it is
popularly referred to as the Five-Pagoda Temple because there are five pagodas
in the temple.
The structure of the Five Pagodas is known
in Buddhist terminology as the diamond throne pagoda style, wherein five small
pagodas stand on a large square foundation known as the throne. This
architectural form was introduced to China by an Indian monk around the year of
1413, and the Temple of True Awakening was constructed here in 1473. The entire
temple complex, including numerous wooden buildings, was renovated and renovated
in 1761, but in the late Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) it was looted and burned to
the ground, first by the Anglo-French Allied Armies in 1860, then again by the
Eight-Power Allied Forces in 1900. Today, the only extant relic is the
monumental diamond throne pagoda. Altogether, China only has six diamond throne
pagodas nationwide, of which three are located in Beijing, namely, the
Five-Pagoda Temple, the Temple of Azure Clouds and the Yellow Temple; and of the
other three, one is in Hohhot in Inner Mongolia, one is the Miaolian Temple in
Kunming City of Yunnan Province and the last one, the Guanghui Temple in
Zhengding County of Hebei Province. Among all the six, the Five-Pagoda Temple in
Beijing is the most beautiful one.
The pagoda is composed of the throne
foundation and the stone pagoda. The throne foundation made of bricks and white
marbles is 7.7 meters high and has six tiers. The five pagodas rise from their
rectangular bases on top of this foundation, one in each of the four corners and
the fifth in the center. The central pagoda, totaling 8 meter, is slightly
higher than the others, with 13 eaves, two more than those in the corners. A
door at the foot of the foundation on each of the southern and northern sides
opens into an inner spiral 44-step stairway that leads to the top of the
foundation. The five pagodas are carved with images of Buddha in five
directions, as well as those of horses, lions, elephants, peacocks and the
gold-winged birds that served as the steeds of Buddha. Carvings in Sanskrit and
in Tibetan provide priceless research materials of the ancient Indian language
and Buddhist scriptures. The central pagoda is also carved with a pair of
footprints of Buddha.
All parts of the diamond throne pagoda in
the Five-Pagoda Temple are symmetrically proportioned, giving viewers an
impression of being stable and unshakable.