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Xi'an Wild Goose Pagoda
World Travel Net, May 15, 2004
BuddhistNews Network 17May2004
Xi'an, China --
Wild Goose
Pagoda, located at the southern end of the Great Compassion
Temple, has become a symbol of Xi’an, a former historical
capital of China.
Wild Goose
Pagoda was built for Monk Tang Sanzang to organize and translate
the Buddhist scriptures that he brought back from India. Wild
Goose Pagoda was originally named Goose Pagoda after a similar
pagoda in India. Later on, a smaller Goose Pagoda was built
inside the Blessings Temple of Changan City. In order to
distinguish between the two, people call the one in the Great
Compassion Temple Wild Goose Pagoda and the one in the Blessings
Temple Small Goose Pagoda.
Wild Goose
Pagoda is built on a 16-foot high, 147-foot square platform. It
is a squared-shape pagoda with seven-floors and is approximately
210 feet tall. The bottom floor covers an 82 square foot area.
The whole structure is made of solid bricks with a circular
staircase to the top. Each floor has four arch gates, one on
each side. From the top, the entire city of Changan lays
revealed before your eyes.
The bottom
floor has a stone gate decorated with fine engravings of Buddha
statues. It is said that they were painted by Mr. Yan Liti, a
well-known Chinese artist from Tang Dynasty. Two stone tablets
are mounted inside brick cages along the two sides of the
southern entrance door. One tablet is engraved with the,
“Preface of the Great Tang Sanzang Scriptures,” while the other
is engraved with Emperor Tang Gaozong’s “Notes on the Preface of
the Great Tang Sanzang Scriptures.” Both of them were from the
calligraphy of Mr. Zhu Suiliang, one of the four most famous
Chinese calligraphers at the beginning of China’s Tang Dynasty.
The tablets are bordered with beautiful and vivid vine-like
designs. The pagoda preserves some important artifacts of
calligraphy, painting and scriptures from China’s Tang Dynasty.
Through the years of the Tang Dynasty, most of the temples were
destroyed by war. The Wild Goose Pagoda is the only one that
remains standing until today.
Wild Goose Pagoda was originally only five-stories high. It was
first remodeled by Queen Wu Zetian in the Tang Dynasty and this
was followed by several other major facelifts. The pagoda has an
overall appearance of a cone-shaped building but each floor has
a square design. The pagoda is made of gray bricks that imitate
wooden columns and borders. It is regarded as one of the
masterpieces among the Buddhist temples.
Great
Compassion Temple is the most magnificent temple in Changan
City. It was built by order of Princess Li Zhi of the Tang
Dynasty. Monk Tang Sanzang was the head administrator and was in
charge of the effort to translate the Buddhist scriptures. He
also oversaw the construction of Wild Goose Pagoda.
Inside the
temple a bell tower and a drum tower face each other. The bell
and drum were used to send messages for people to follow. The
old saying, “Bell charms at dawn and drum beats at dusk,” gives
a perfect description of the Buddhist lives at the temple. At
the east side of the temple a 3-meter-tall bell, weighing
approximately 15,000 kg (16.5 tons) hangs right in the middle of
the bell tower. Traditionally, newly promoted officials for the
imperial court would visit this temple and leave their
signatures at the tower. This is the well-known “Wild Goose
Pagoda signature.”
Other
famous artists in Tang Dynasty such as Wu Daozi and Wang Wei
also contributed masterpieces to the temple. Unfortunately these
relics have vanished before our time. Only the ones on the beams
and frames over the doorways are kept today. The most precious
piece is the engraved picture, “Palace” on the beam of the west
doorway.
A group of
smaller pagodas with the tombs of monks were built at the
southeast side of the Wild Goose Pagoda. Six of them were built
in Qing Dynasty. The centerpiece, “The Great Hall of Solemnity”
with clay statues of Buddhas and Bodhisattvas is the place where
monks chant Buddhist scriptures, while the “Law Court” is used
to interpret and learn Buddhist scriptures. A bronze statue of
Buddha Amitabha resides inside the “Law Court.”
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