Fortune Telling Collection - Fortune-telling birth date - Where is Yuncheng Fortune Telling Sanqing Pavilion _ Where is Yuncheng Fortune Telling Sanqing Pavilion?

Where is Yuncheng Fortune Telling Sanqing Pavilion _ Where is Yuncheng Fortune Telling Sanqing Pavilion?

Where does Sanqing Pavilion belong?

Sanqing Pavilion is a cultural tourist attraction.

Sanqing Pavilion, located in the northernmost part of the famous Xishan Scenic Area in Kunming, is the gateway of Longmen Scenic Area. Here, the cliff is steep, the stone peak is towering, and an artificially dug stone path between pine and cypress winds up along the steep rock gap of the stone wall. This is one of the best places to see the scenery of Dianchi Lake 500 miles below the mountain, and it is also a secluded place to explore the ancient times. In terms of mountain roads, it is also the "best";

Sanqing Pavilion was built in the Yuan Dynasty and was originally the Summer Palace in Liang Wang. It was called the summer terrace in ancient times. By the end of the Yuan Dynasty, there were wars and bonfires, and the mountain gradually became barren and dilapidated.

During the Ming Dynasty and Jiajing period, the hereditary Duke Mu of Guizhou donated money, and Li Yingju, a native of Baidu Village in Dianchi Lake, built Haiya Temple here. Because there are stones shaped like arhats in the temple, Haizai Temple is also called arhat Temple. During the Daoguang period of the Qing Dynasty, craftsmen were organized to rebuild pavilions along this steep cliff again, gradually forming a nine-story eleven-pavilion building with Sanqing Pavilion as the main body today. From a distance, the high-rise buildings are green and flying all over the sky, and the scenery is quite spectacular;

Sanqing Pavilion, the seat of Taoism, has a long history in Yunnan. Nanzhao and Tang made Cangshan swear that "three palaces of heaven, earth and water were invited, and five mountains and four blasphemies were held" as proof. The highest god worshipped at that time was the incarnation of "Tao", that is, the God of the Yuan Dynasty (also known as Taishang Daojun), who lived in a state of pure heaven and jade. According to Taoism, these three gods presided over the "three days and three wonders". Jade Qing, Shangqing and Tianqing are collectively called "Sanqing", which refers to the highest fairyland where Taoist immortals live. Therefore, most temples built by Taoism are named after Sanqing. For this reason, Sanqing Pavilion's temples are idols of Taoist belief, such as Raytheon, Guandi, Zhang Xian, Luzhen, Zhenwu, Lingguan, Sanqing and Jade Emperor.

So the buildings around Sanqing Pavilion are typical Taoist architectural styles; Facing the mountain and the sea, you live in a dangerous nest, and the heights are too cold. As the saying goes, "If you live in the sky, people will come up to the wall and turn around sideways, and the wonders will suddenly become clear." Being away from the world is transcendental, but it is philosophical. The inscriptions or couplets around Sanqing Pavilion not only exaggerate the religious color of Taoism, but also reflect the realistic scenery, which contains a furnace of life philosophy. If tourists first set foot on the winding path leading to Sanqing Pavilion, climb 72 stone steps and come to the "Sanqingjing" stone workshop, they can see such a couplet: "If you are at the highest place, you must hold your head high above others". This is not only visible and tangible, but also contains the meaning of promoting people to climb high;

Therefore, visitors climb the pavilions in and around Sanqing Pavilion, and look for a place to view the scenery casually, which makes people feel that they are overlooking all beings, as if they have entered a refined realm. Luohan Cliff is connected to the sky on the top and Dianchi Lake on the bottom, with blue sky and white clouds floating on it and clear water and white sails. In the distance, the buildings in Kunming are far away, and the village at the foot is like a lifetime ago. Enjoy the scenery here. It can be said that it washes away the troubles of the whole world in the beautiful scenery, regains a comfortable mind and is refreshed;

Sanqing Pavilion boarded the "Lingxiao Baoge" Square, and there was a Koizumi named "Little Bull Spring" in front of the stone wall of the secluded road. According to legend, in the early years of Jiajing in the Ming Dynasty, a Taoist Zhao lived in seclusion in the mountains, suffering from lack of water, and cooking and drinking all depended on bringing cattle from the mountains for more than 20 years. After the cow was dying, it struggled to beat the rock with its hoof, and suddenly a pool of water gushed out under its feet, although it did not dry up after the drought. Later generations were moved by it and named it "Jiaoniuquan". Nowadays, tourists come here and sigh at the clear spring water that suddenly appears between the dry and hard rock walls;

In history, the plank roads in Sanqing Pavilion were much narrower and steeper than today, and some sections really scared pedestrians. After liberation, after many repairs, the safety factor of steep mountain roads has been enhanced, which is conducive to more people to visit. But today, tourists still need to be more careful when going to this section, which can be said that scenery and risks coexist. Perhaps it is with this that Sanqing Pavilion becomes fascinating;

Kunming, Yunnan