The Small Wild Goose Pagoda is
located about 1 kilometers south of Jianfu Temple in Xi'an City of Shaanxi
Province. Along with the Big Wild Goose Pagoda, it was an important landmark in
Chang'an, capital of the Tang Dynasty (618-907). Since it was smaller and built
later than the Big Wild Goose Pagoda, it was named the Small Wild Goose Pagoda.
The Jianfu Temple, originally located at
Kaihuafang of the Tang Dynasty Chang'an, was former residence of Princess
Xiangcheng, a daughter of Tang Emperor Taizong. It was originally established in
684 in hornor of Li Zhi -- Emperor Gaozong of the Tang Dynasty -- and its
original name was the Xianfu Temple, which changed into the Jianfu Temple in
690. It was a famous temple in Chang'an City of the Tang Dynasty.
The temple was the place where the great
translator Monk Yijing of the Tang Dynasty translated Buddhist scriptures.
Yijing set out by sea for India in search of Buddhist principles in 671. After
traveling over 30 countries for 25 years, he came back to China with some 400
volumes of holy Sanskirt scriptures, and stayed in the Jianfu Temple. Yijing
translated altogether 56 volumes of scriptures in the Jianfu Temple and wrote
the book Biography of Eminent Monks of the Tang Dynasty in Search of Buddhist
Truth in India, which is of great help to the study of Chinese and
Indonesian history and the cultural exchange. Now the only extant ancient
architecture in the Jianfu Temple is the Small Wild Goose Pagoda.
The Small Wild Goose Pagoda is a multi-eave
and square brick structure. Originally it was 46 meters high with 15 storeys,
but now it is 43.3 meters high with 13 storeys, because its steeple was
destroyed, as a result of earthquakes. Carved on the lintel are images of arhats
and designs of grasses, with excellent workmanship reflecting the artistic style
of the early Tang Dynasty. The pagoda has fifteen pent roofs. Each storey is
very low with small windows only on the south and north sides to let in light
and air. The eaves are formed by designs in the shape of chevrons and fifteen
tiers of overlapping bricks, each tier wider than the one below, thus making the
eaves curve inward, a characteristic of multi-eave pagodas in the Tang Dynasty.
From the first to the fifth storey it tapers very little, but from the sixth
storey up, it reduces drastically, giving the pagoda a smooth curved contour.
The tubular interior of the pagoda has wooden flooring and a winding flight of
wooden steps leading to other storeys.
The shape and structure of the pagoda are
typical of early multi-eave pagodas and influenced many brick and stone
multi-eave pagodas built later in other parts of the country.
Standing in one of the courtyards is a huge
bell -- 4.5 meters in height, 7.6 meters in diameter along the rim, and 10 tons
in weight -- dating back to the Jin Dynasty (1192). It was called the "Magic
Bell" for an interesting legend that the one who missed his beloved, living far
away from him, could write down their names on a piece of yellow paper and send
a message by the sound of the Bell. Hence, the "Morning Bell Chimes of the
Pagoda" is one of the Eight Famous Scenic Features in
Shaanxi.