Guiyuan Temple, one of the four major jungles of Buddhism in Wuhan City, was founded in the 15th year of Qing Shunzhi (1658), and the name of Guiyuan Temple is derived from the meaning of the Buddhist scriptures "Guiyuan is the best, convenient and multiple doors". It covers an area of 4.67 hectares and has more than 200 temples. There are bell and drum towers on both sides, and Wei Yu Temple in the middle, and then enters the Daxiong Temple. Its north and south two houses are the guest hall and the chai hall, followed by the zen hall. The south courtyard of Luohan hall is dedicated to 500 statues of Luohan made by deplasticization technology. They are of different shapes and lifelike. They are the top products in traditional Chinese statue art. The north courtyard has Tibetan Jingge, Dashige, Cuiweijing and other buildings. The first floor of the Tibetan Jing Pavilion is a display room, displaying the stone carvings of Northern Wei Dynasty, Guanyin of Tang Dynasty and other Buddha statues of successive dynasties, as well as various precious instruments, calligraphy and paintings; the second floor collects more than 7,000 volumes of Buddhist classics, including the scriptures and Bayeux scriptures engraved in India, Myanmar, Thailand, Sri Lanka and other countries. It is the first major temple to be announced by the State Council to carry out religious activities.