Suzhou Architectural Picture-Sanqing Hall of Xuanmiao Temple
Brief introduction of Sanqing Hall of Xuanmiao Temple;
Xuanmiao Temple was founded in the second year of Xianning in the Western Jin Dynasty (1860), located in Suzhou, Jiangsu. The Tang Dynasty was called Kaiyuan Palace, and the Northern Song Dynasty was called Tianqing Hall. It was renamed in the Yuan Dynasty and was destroyed many times. Sanqing Hall is the main hall of Xuanmiao Temple, which was rebuilt in the sixth year of Xichun in the Southern Song Dynasty (1 179). It is the largest ancient wooden structure building in the south of China. It is not only the representative of official architecture in Song Dynasty, but also embodies the characteristics of local architecture, and it is an important example to study the differences between north and south architecture in Song Dynasty. 1982 has been designated as a national key cultural relics protection unit.
Suzhou architecture picture-Ruiguang Temple
Brief introduction of Ruiguang Temple:
Ruiguang Temple was originally named Fusaiji. According to records, it was built by Sun Quan in the fourth year of Wu Chiwu in the Three Kingdoms (24 1) to welcome the healthy life of monks in the western regions. In ten years, Sun Quan built thirteen more pagodas in the temple to repay his mother's kindness. According to the chronological characters of treasures, Buddhist scriptures, stone buddhas, stone foundations, tower bricks and other cultural relics found in the tower, as well as the plane, structure and appearance of the tower, this tower was built from the first year of Jingdezhen in the Northern Song Dynasty (1004) to the eighth year of Tiansheng (1030), when the Buddhist temple was named Ruiguang Temple. Temples were destroyed and restored. In the Southern Song Dynasty, Xi Chun, Hongwu, Yongle, Tianshun and Jiajing Chongzhen in the Ming Dynasty, and Kangxi, Qianlong and Daoguang built pagodas in the Qing Dynasty. In the tenth year of Xianfeng in Qing Dynasty (1860), temples were destroyed and towers were preserved. Eleven years of Tongzhi (1872) restoration.
Suzhou architecture picture-Suzhou Confucian Temple
Brief introduction of Suzhou Confucian Temple:
Suzhou Confucian Temple is located in Renmin Road, Suzhou City, Jiangsu Province. Suzhou Confucian Temple School was founded by Fan Zhongyan, a famous minister in the Northern Song Dynasty, in the second year of Jing You (1035), with a history of more than 960 years. The year after Fan Zhongyan became well-known in Suzhou, he built a temple on the site of Nanyuan. Fan Zhongyan hired Hu Yuan, a famous educator at that time, as a professor. Because his well-run school was famous all over the world for a time, it became an example for local counties to follow. Since then, after large-scale construction, the Confucian Temple in Fu Xue in the Ming and Qing Dynasties has taken shape, covering an area of nearly 200 mu. Known as the highest institution of learning in Jiangnan. The existing area is only one sixth of that at that time. At present, the important buildings preserved are Lingxingmen, Jiymen, Dacheng Hall, Chongsheng Temple, Qixingchi and Minglun Hall, which are now national key cultural relics protection units.
Suzhou architecture picture-Netscape Garden
Introduction to the park master:
Master Wang's garden is a representative work of medium-sized classical gardens with artistic characteristics and cultural value in Suzhou gardens.
The Master's Garden was founded in 1 174 (early Song Dynasty), originally named "Fishing Hidden". After many vicissitudes, it was named "Master of Nets Garden" around 1765 (thirty years of Qing Qianlong), forming the present layout. Master Wang's garden changed hands several times. Most of the owners are literati, and their poems and inscriptions are left in the garden, which have been restored and sorted out.
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