Kunming of Yunan Tour Package
Yuantong Temple
Yuantong Temple is at the foot of
Yuantong Hill in the northern part of
Kunming. With a history of more than 1,200 years, Yuantong
Temple is the grandest as well as the most important Buddhist temple
in Yunnan Province. King Yimouxun of the Nanzhao Kingdom built the
temple during the late eighth century as a continuation of Putuoluo
Temple, and the restorations to the temple performed from the Qing
Dynasty onward had not changed Yuantong Temple's unique mixed
architectural style of the Yuan and Ming Dynasties.
Unlike all other Buddhist temples, which are built on
an ascendant, you enter Yuantong Temple from above and descend along
a gently sloping garden path. The view before you starting your
peaceful walk beneath the gigantic cypress trees that line the
garden path to the temple with its extensive array of flowers and
foliage is deeply restful and impressive. A memorial archway with
four Chinese characters -Yuantong Shengjing (Yuantong Wonderland)-is
standing on the halfway; you can see the entire temple from here.
The temple complex is built around Yuantong Hall (Mahavira
Hall), which is known as the “Fane on the Water” for it is
surrounded by a very large pond filled with limpid water and fish. A
delicate stone bridge which has an elegant octagonal pavilion stands
in the center connects Mahavira Hall and the temple entrance. The
pavilion is connected to the rest of the complex by various bridges
and walkways.
Sakymuni, Amitabha and the Medicine Buddha, all Yuan
Dynasty statues, are found in the main hall. The surrounding 500
Buddhist Arhats who are carved in the walls are rare treasures noted
for their perfect proportions and lively appearances. Also in this
temple hall are two ten meter high pillars from the Ming Dynasty
that are each engraved with a dragon - one yellow and one green -
who are trying to extend their bodies and claws into the air as if
they are ready to fly. Like the Arhats, they impart the feeling that
at any moment they could spring into action.
Outside, on each side of the main hall, there are stone
staircases that are carved out of the mountainside and wind their
way to the top of the hill. As you climb these stairs, there are
ancient inscriptions along the way and various tone artworks that
are considered the most important historical relics in Kunming. From
the top of the stairs, you are presented with a terrific panoramic
view of the entire complex. It is from here that you can most
appreciate the architecture of the remarkable temple complex.
In 1982, Thai Buddhists sent a copper statue of
Sakymuni to Yuantong Temple as a symbol of friendship, and the
statue is three and a half meters high and four tons in weight. A
few years later, in 1985, a Copper Buddha Hall was built in a
combination of Chinese and Tai styles to house this exquisite gift.
Surrounding the temple pond are a series of halls where
you will find old women praying, people sitting and chatting,
ongoing classes in Buddhist scriptures, a magnificent calligraphy
studio, an exhibit of temple photographs taken at the end of the
Qing Dynasty by Auguste de Francois, a temple shop, a restaurant,
and more.
Yuantong Temple is a working temple that also
represents the Buddhism of China today. Along with the patronage of
the local people of Kunming and Yunnan in general, Buddhists from
around the world come here on pilgrimages to pay homage, there are
special Buddhist services two times each month, and the Buddhist
Association of Yunnan Province is located here. Yuantong Temple
plays a very important role in history and in the modern world.
|