Home » » The Lama Temple

The Lama Temple

Written By Unknown on Thursday, December 24, 2015 | 1:27 AM

Advertisements
Also called the Yonghe Temple, the Lama Temple is one in all Beijing's most engaging and best-preserved temples. Completed in 1745, the building served a political purpose by giving Buddhism, the faith of the then simply annexed Xizang, an officer seat within the capital. designed to generous proportions and equipped with several valuable works of art, the foremost necessary feature is that the Hall of the Kings of Heaven (Tian Wang Dian) with its sculpture of Buddha encircled by the four kings United Nations agency ar given symbolic objects (a anuran, a sword, a snake, and a shield).


Additionally noteworthy is that the sculpture of Weituo, the preserver of Buddhism, holding AN iron employees. different necessary buildings embody the marquee of the Four-tongued Stele (Yubi Ting), that homes a stele geological dating back to 1792 that contains the history of the Lama faith written in Chinese, Manchurian, Tibetan, and Mongolian; the Hall of the Buddhist Wheel (Falun Dian), the teaching and auditorium of the religious residence, its interior dominated by a six-meter-tall sculpture, 2 thrones, and diverse sacred manuscripts; and therefore the largest building at the Lama Temple, the marquee of 4 Thousand Fortunes (Wangfu Ge) with its huge 18-meter-high wood sculpture.
Advertisements