Everything about The Puning Temple totally explained
The
Puning Temple (普宁寺), or
Temple of Universal Peace of
Chengde,
Hebei province,
China (commonly called the Big Buddha Temple) is a
Qing Dynasty era
Buddhist temple complex built in 1755, during the reign of the
Qianlong Emperor (
1735-
1796 AD) to show the Qing's respect to the ethnic minorities. It is located near the
Chengde Mountain Resort, and alongside the equally famed
Putuo Zongcheng Temple, it's one of the "Eight Outer Temples" of Chengde. Much how the Putuo Zongcheng Temple was modeled after the
Tibetan
Potala Palace, the Puning Temple was modeled after the
Samye Monastery, the sacred
Lamaist site in Tibet. The front temple was constructed in the Chinese style, although the temple complex follows both Chinese and Tibetan architectural styles. The Puning Temple also houses the world's tallest wooden sculpture of the
Bodhisattva Avalokiteśvara (22.28-meter-high and 110-ton), hence the Puning Temple is often nicknamed the "Big Buddha Temple". The complex features temple halls, pavilions, drum towers and bell towers.
History
Since the 17th century, during the late Chinese
Ming Dynasty, the
Dzungar people of northwestern China (modern
Xinjiang) were engaged in a civil war and conflicts with other
nomadic horse-archer groups in the region. The later Qianlong Emperor dispatched an army to
Yili in order to suppress their resistance against the Qing Dynasty. The Chinese attacked Kulja (
Yining) and captured the ruling Dzungar
khan. After the conquest, Emperor Qianlong personally inscribed his writing on a tablet that's located in the stele pavilion of the Puning Temple. This stele of 1755, called the
Puning Sibei, commemorated the founding of the temple and the conquering of the Dzungars. Qianlong ordered for the building of this new Temple of Universal Peace, a symbol of the emperor's ambition to maintain peace among various ethnic minorities and a stable environment within the northwestern regions. The historian Waley-Cohen calls Chengde "a crucial location for the exhibition of Manchu power and the representation of Qing imperial knowledge," being the location of the summer capital.
Since the Dzungar were followers of Lamaism, the temple was built in imitation of Samye monastery, the sacred place of Lamaism in Tibet.
The large wooden Buddhist statue of the Bodhisattva
Avalokiteśvara within the main hall of the Puning Temple is one of its most renowned features. It shows a thousand different eyes and a thousand different arms stretched out from its frame (in various sizes). The statue itself is made from five kinds of wood, including
pine,
cypress,
elm,
fir, and
linden.
As of 1994, the Chengde Mountain Resort and Chengde's Eight Outer Temples (including the Puning Temple) were established as
UNESCO World Heritage Sites. Today, the Puning Temple remains a site of tourist attraction and local festivities.
Gallery
Image:Dafuosi.jpg|Main hall housing the Bodhisattva
Image:Chengde, China - 016.jpg|Looking up at the Bodhisattva
Image:Chengde, China - 011.jpg|Temple grounds
Image:Chengde, China - 008.jpg|Main temple
Image:Chengde, China - 021.jpg|Temple grounds
Image:Dafuosi3.jpg|Turning wheels of the Buddha's doctrine at Puning Temple, a modern addition.
Image:Dafuosi4.jpg|A courtyard of Puning Temple
Image:Chengde, China - 006.jpg|A Chinese pavilion of Puning Temple
Further Information
Get more info on 'Puning Temple'.
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