Giant Wild Goose
Pagoda or Big Wild Goose Pagoda, is a Buddhist pagoda located in southern Xi'an , Shaanxi province, China .
It was built in 652 during the Tang Dynasty and originally had five stories,
although the structure was rebuilt in 704 during the reign of Empress Wu Zetian
and its exterior brick facade was renovated during the Ming Dynasty. One of the
pagoda's many functions was to hold sutras and figurines of the Buddha that
were brought to China from India by the
Buddhist translator and traveler Xuanzang. By standing on the top of the
pagoda, you will have a great view over the city of Xi'an .
The Big Wild Goose
Pagoda is closely associated with Buddhist relics. In the third year of the
Reign of Yonghui (652 A .D),
Master Xuan Zang built this pagoda to house the Buddhist scriptures and relics
he had brought back from the west. According to The Biography of the Master of
Buddhism, Master Xuan Zang brought back over 150 relics, one of which was a box
with some sacred bones inside.
The original pagoda was built during the reign of Emperor Gaozong of Tang
(r. 649-683), then standing at a height of 54 meters. However, this
construction of rammed earth with a stone exterior facade eventually collapsed
five decades later. The ruling Empress Wu Zetian had the pagoda rebuilt and
added five new stories by the year 704; however, a massive earthquake in 1556
heavily damaged the pagoda and reduced it by three stories, to its current
height of seven stories. The entire structure leans very perceptibly (several
degrees) to the west. Its related structure, the 8th century Small Wild Goose
Pagoda in Xi'an ,
only suffered minor damage in the 1556 earthquake (still unrepaired to this
day). The Giant Wild Goose Pagoda was extensively repaired during the Ming
Dynasty (1368–1644) and renovated again in 1964. The pagoda currently stands at
a height of 64 meters tall and from the top it offers views over the current
city of Xi'an .
During the Tang Dynasty the pagoda was located within the grounds of a
monastery, within a walled ward of the larger southeastern sector of the city,
then known as Chang'an. The monastic grounds around the pagoda during the Tang
Dynasty had ten courtyards and a total of 1,897 bays. In those days graduate
students of the Advanced Scholars examination in Chang'an inscribed their names
at this monastery.
Close by the pagoda is the Temple
of Great Maternal Grace ;
Da Ci'en. This temple was originally built in 589 and then rebuilt 647 in memory of his mother Empress
Wende by Li Zhi who later became the Tang Emperor Gaozong.
For more information, please visit http://top-chinatour.com
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