Fortune Telling Collection - Fortune-telling birth date - Where is the Wu Ye Temple in Wutai Mountain?

Where is the Wu Ye Temple in Wutai Mountain?

Wu Ye Temple is located in the center of Taihuai Town, Wutai County, Shanxi Province, 25 kilometers away from the south gate, 20 kilometers away from the west gate, 30 kilometers away from the north gate 10, 30 kilometers away from the top of the north platform and 25 kilometers away from Dingding, Dongtai.

Wu Ye Temple is located in Wanfo Pavilion, Taihuai Town, Wutai Mountain, 30 kilometers away from Zhongtai Peak. The Wanfo Pavilion was built in the forty-four years of Wanli in the Ming Dynasty, namely 16 16, and rebuilt in the Qing Dynasty. The existing temple buildings are mainly left over from the Qing Dynasty.

Wu Ye Temple is a small temple among many temples in Wutai Mountain, but it is one of the most popular and famous temples in Wutai Mountain. It is said that Wu Ye Temple is a good place to make wishes, so there is an endless stream of good men and women who worship on the first and fifteenth day of the first lunar month, and a series of activities such as praying for rain, singing operas and going to the market have been formed for a long time.

architectural feature

Gu Song in the temple is surrounded by cigarettes. Looking at its architectural pattern, we can see that the layout here is very unique. The main Manjusri Hall is a two-story building with an east-west orientation. Commonly known as Wu Ye Temple Ou Building, it faces south, with a stage just south.

According to Shi Ke's records, Wanfo Pavilion was built in the 44th year of Wanli in Ming Dynasty. The earliest building age was Manjusri Hall, with three eaves and four corridors, resting on the top of the mountain and containing 10,000 Buddha statues of the same size, hence the name Wanfoge.

The upper layer is the Tibetan King, Bodhisattva and Gong Min and his son, each with seven thousand kilograms of bronze bells; The lower floor is dedicated to the three world statues of Manjusri, Pu Xian and Guanyin shaped in the Ming Dynasty, with vivid shapes.