Nanchan Temple

Nanchan Temple
The Great Buddha Hall of Nanchan Temple. A small timber building with massive overhanging eaves with a bright blue sky behind it.
The Great Buddha Hall of Nanchan Temple
Religion
AffiliationBuddhism
ProvinceShanxi
Location
LocationMount Wutai
Nanchan Temple is located in Shanxi
Nanchan Temple
Shown within Shanxi
Nanchan Temple is located in China
Nanchan Temple
Nanchan Temple (China)
Geographic coordinates38°42′04″N 113°06′50″E / 38.70111°N 113.11389°E / 38.70111; 113.11389
Architecture
Completed782
Tang dynasty

Nanchan Temple (Chinese: ; pinyin: Nánchán Sì) is a Buddhist temple located near the town of Doucun on Mount Wutai, Shanxi, China. Nanchan Temple was built in 782 during China's Tang dynasty, and its Great Buddha Hall is currently China's oldest preserved timber building extant, as wooden buildings are often prone to fire and various destruction. Not only is Nanchan Temple an important architectural site, but it also contains an original set of artistically important Tang sculptures dating from the period of its construction. Seventeen sculptures share the hall's interior space with a small stone pagoda.

History

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According to an inscription on a beam, the Great Buddha Hall of Nanchan Temple was first built in 782 CE during the Tang dynasty.[1] It escaped destruction during the Buddhist purges of 845, perhaps due to its isolated location in the mountains. Another inscription on a beam indicates that the hall was renovated in 1086 of the Song dynasty, and during that time all but four of the original square columns were replaced with round columns.[2] In the 1950s, the building was rediscovered by architectural historians and, in 1961, was recognized as China's oldest standing timber-frame building. Just five years later in 1966, the building was damaged in an earthquake, and during the renovation period in the 1970s, historians got a chance to study the building piece by piece.[3]

Great Buddha Hall

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As the oldest extant timber-frame building in China, the Great Buddha Hall is an important building in the understanding of Chinese architectural history. The humble building is a three bay square hall that is 10 metres (33 ft) deep and 11.75 metres (38.5 ft) across the front. The roof is supported by twelve pillars that are implanted directly into a brick foundation. The hip-gable roof is supported by five-puzuo brackets. The hall does not contain any interior columns or a ceiling, nor are there any struts supporting the roof in between the columns. All of these features indicate that this is a low-status structure. The hall contains several features of Tang dynasty halls, including its longer central front bay, the use of camel-hump braces, and the presence of a yuetai.[3]

Sculptures

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Tang Dynasty Sakyamuni Statue

Along with nearby Foguang Temple, Nanchan Temple contains original sculptures dating from the Tang dynasty. The hall contains seventeen statues and are lined up on an inverted U-shaped dais.[4] The largest statue is of Sakyamuni, placed in the center of the hall sitting cross-legged on a sumeru throne adorned with sculpted images of a lion and demigod. Above the large halo behind the statue are sculpted representations of lotus flowers, celestial beings and mythical birds. Flanking him on each side are attendant bodhisattvas with a knee placed on a lotus. A large statue of Samantabhadra riding an elephant is at the far left of the hall and a large statue of Manjushri riding a lion is on the far left. There are also statues of two of Sakyamuni's disciples (Ānanda and Mahākāśyapa), two statues of heavenly kings and four statues of attendants.[5] Of the seventeen original Tang statues, three of them were stolen in 1999 and have not been recovered (left and right side attendant bodhisattvas on lotus, an attendant statue leading the lion).

The Great Buddha Hall also contains one small carved Northern Wei stone pagoda that is five levels high. The first level is carved with a story about the Buddha, and each corner contains an additional small pagoda. Each side of the second level is carved with one large Buddha in the center, flanked with four smaller Buddhas on each side. The upper three levels have three carved Buddhas on each side.[6] The stone pagoda was stolen in 2011 and has not been recovered.

Notes

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  1. ^ Steinhardt 2004, p. 235.
  2. ^ Steinhardt 2002, p. 114.
  3. ^ a b Steinhardt 1997, p. 68.
  4. ^ Howard et al. 2006, p. 371.
  5. ^ Howard et al. 2006, p. 372.
  6. ^ Zhao 2007, p. 146.

References

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  • Howard, Angela Falco; Li, Song; Wu, Hung; Yang, Hong (2006). Chinese Sculpture. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-10065-5.
  • Steinhardt, Nancy Shatzman (1997). Liao Architecture. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 0-8248-1843-1.
  • Steinhardt, Nancy Shatzman, ed. (2002). Chinese Architecture. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-09559-3.
  • Steinhardt, Nancy Shatzman (June 2004). "The Tang Architectural Icon and the Politics of Chinese Architectural History". The Art Bulletin. 86 (2): 228–254. doi:10.1080/00043079.2004.10786192. JSTOR 3177416. S2CID 154323035.
  • Zhao, Yu, ed. (2007). 山西 [Shanxi] (in Chinese). Beijing: Chinese Travel Press. ISBN 978-7-5032-3001-1.
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