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Hengshan Mountain
Hengshan Mountain is located in Hunyuan County of Shanxi Province in northern
China. It is the Northern Mountain of the Five Sacred Mountains. Boasting 108
peaks and spanning 150 kilometers, it has an average elevation of 2,017 meters.
The Tianfeng Peak, the highest peak, is 2,190 meters above sea level, the
highest among the Five Sacred Mountains.
Legend has it that 4,000 years ago when King Shun visited the mountain and
saw the lofty peaks, he named it the "Northern Sacred Mountain". During the Qin
Dynasty (221-206BC), Emperor Shihuang named 12 famous mountains, and Hengshan
Mountain was regarded as the "Second Mountain in the World". In ancient times,
many emperors and celebrities visited Hengshan Mountain and left quite a lot of
stone inscriptions of poems.
Natural Heritage
Hengshan Mountain is famous for steepy ridges, splendid
peaks, exotic-shaped temples, and gushing fountains, together with oddly-shaped
stones and forests of ancient trees, which constitute a beautiful landscape.
It is called "The First Mountain Guarding the North Borders", depicting its
magnitude and wonder. The mountain links with the Taihang Mountain Range in the
east, and to the north it faces the vast expanse of a plateau, thus forming a
natural screen for Shanxi Province. The Great Wall winds up the mountain,
forming many ancient strategic passes; thus, passes, ancient castles and beacon
towers constitute a unique landscape differing from that of the other four
mountains.
Hengshan Mountain is a very good summer resort. It has a semi-arid
continental climate, with cold winter, dry and windy spring, humid summer and
sunny but short autumn. It has an annual temperature of 6.1oC -- the hottest
month, July, averaging 21.6oC and the coldest month, January, 12oC.
Hengshan Mountain's main peak, Tianfeng (Heavenly Peak) Ridge, rises 2,190
meters above sea level. Its steep northern slope is covered with pine trees, and
located on its southern slope are temples and monasteries built by ancient kings
and emperors to worship their ancestors. Hengshan Mountain was once famous for
its "Eighteen Sites of Interest, and there still remain a dozen sites such as
the Xuankong (Suspending or Mid-air) Temple, Zhaodian Hall, Jiutian (Nine
Heavens) Palace, Huixian (Celestial-Meeting) Mansion and Flying Stone Cave, etc.
Cultural Heritage: Temples on the Cliff
Hengshan Mountain boasts many cultural relics like
temples, sites of academy, steles and engravings, some of which occupy important
positions in the development of China's ancient architecture, such as the
Xuankong Temple, Yuanjue Brick Pagoda and Yongan Temple. The Xuankong Temple,
built 1,400 years ago, hosts worship for the Taoists, Confucians and Buddhists.
The temple is hung in the middle of the cliff and is still in perfect conditions
after so many years.
Besides the Xuankong Temple, many other temples are constructed on the cliffs
or caved just like castles in the air, adding to steepness and grandiosity.
Standing high in the mountain, with the clouds floating under your feet and the
wind in the pine trees resounding above your head, the mountain peaks
occasionally appearing and disappearing in the clouds, one will be reluctant to
leave. On the sides of some cliffs there are full of stone inscriptions
eulogizing the beauty of Hengshan Mountain by celebrities in
history.
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