Dule Temple

Dule Temple

Guanyin Pavilion
Basic information
Location Ji County, Tianjin
Geographic coordinates 40°02′39″N 117°23′48″E / 40.04417°N 117.39667°E / 40.04417; 117.39667Coordinates: 40°02′39″N 117°23′48″E / 40.04417°N 117.39667°E / 40.04417; 117.39667
Affiliation Buddhist
Province Municipality of Tianjin
Architectural description
Completed 984 CE
Liao Dynasty
Specifications
Height (max) 23 meters

The Dule Temple (Chinese: ; pinyin: Dúlè Sì; literally: "Temple of Solitary Joy"[1]) is a Buddhist temple located in the town of Jixian, in Ji County, under the administration of the city of Tianjin, China. The temple is of historical as well as architectural significance. Its oldest surviving buildings are two timber-frame structures, the front gate and the central hall (pavilion) that houses a colossal clay statue of the goddess Guanyin (Avalokiteśvara). Both structures date back to the Liao Dynasty and are among the oldest surviving wooden buildings in China.[2]

History

The origins of the Dule Temple date back at least to the early Tang Dynasty. However, no buildings from the Tang Dynasty era have survived on the site. The oldest buildings still in existence, the Shan Gate and the Guanyin Pavilion, were constructed during a renovation of the temple in the second year of Tonghe Emperor of the Liao Dynasty (984 AD). These buildings, both central features of the temple, were designed and constructed by local architects and craftsmen on the basis of the Tang architectural technology and carving techniques.[3]

In 755, An Lushan held a rally in the Dule Temple at the onset of his rebellion against the Tang emperor. The name of the temple could be a reference to An Lushan, who was also known as An Dule. However, the name could also have originated from the Dule River that flows to northwest of the city, although it is not clear if the river's name predates that of the temple.[2]

In 1928, a unit of soldiers commanded by warlord Sun Dianying was stationed in the Dule Temple and used the main hall as barracks. Sun Dianying and his troops were responsible for the looting of the nearby Eastern Qing Tombs. A leftover from the military occupation of the temple are bullet holes in the timber frames that were inflicted during target practice.[2]

In the early 1930s, Dule Temple was studied by Liang Sicheng, the author of the China's first modern history on Chinese architecture. In the same decade, the temple was converted into the Jixian Village Normal School.[2]

Site Description

The Shan Gate (Chinese: ; pinyin: Shānmén; literally: "Hill Gate") is a single-story building that stands 10 meters tall and has three single-eaves Wudian roofs (Chinese: 殿; pinyin: diàn dǐng, i.e., roofs with four slopes and five ridges). It functions as the front gate on the temple's south side and houses the statues of two guardian kings.[2]

The Guanyin Pavilion (Chinese: ; pinyin: Guānyīn) is a three-story timber structure with five single-eaves Xieshan roofs (Chinese: ; pinyin: Xiēshān dǐng, i.e., half-hipped, half-gabled) roofs. The pavilion has a height of about 23 meters and consists of more than one thousand individual pieces.[2] Inside the hall there is a clay statue of Guanyin with the heads of ten small Buddhas visible on its crown (Chinese: ; pinyin: Shíyī Miàn Guānyīnxiàng; literally: "Eleven-face Guanyin clay sculpture"). The statue, measuring 16 meters in height,[4] is the biggest of its kind in ancient China.[3]

The Guanyin Pavilion 
The Shan Gate 

World Heritage status

The site was added to the UNESCO World Heritage Tentative List on in the Cultural category.[3]

Location

The Dule Temple is located in the center of the town of Jixian (Chinese: 蓟县城; pinyin: Jìxiàn Chéng). Its address is Wuting Street 41, Jixian, Tianjin City (Chinese: 天津市蓟县城内武定街41号; pinyin: Tiānjīn Shì Jìxiàn Chéngnèi Wǔdìng Jiē 41 hào).

Notes and references

  1. Also translated: Monastery of Solitary Happiness
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Nancy Shatzman Steinhardt, Liao architecture, University of Hawaii Press, 1997
  3. 1 2 3 Dule Temple - UNESCO World Heritage Centre
  4. Chinese Academy of Architecture (1 January 1982). Ancient Chinese architecture. China Building Industry Press. p. 90. ISBN 978-962-04-0202-9. Retrieved 20 July 2011.

See also

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