Qita Temple, the structure of the temple hall is elegant, simple and solemn. It is a typical Zen Jialan seven halls. The main buildings are: Seven Pagodas, Shanmen Archway, Tianwang Hall, Yuantong Hall, Sansheng Hall, Dharma Hall and Tibetan Scripture Building, Jade Buddha Pavilion , ancestral hall, bell tower, drum tower, east and west wing rooms, comprehensive building, etc. In addition to the main halls of the temple being classical buildings, there are also a number of precious cultural relics preserved: the stupa of Zen Master Xinjingzanghuan, the founder of the temple, and two large bronze bells in the Song Dynasty, each weighing seven or eight thousand catties, carved in the thirteenth year of Yongzheng in the Qing Dynasty (1735). , One of the "Dragon Treasures" awarded by Guangxu, a bundle of Sanskrit Bayeux, and five hundred Arhat statues carved in stone in Qing Dynasty, exquisite craftsmanship, both form and spirit, Buddhist treasures, unparalleled in the world, in the "List of Hearts" cultural relics showroom Collection of various precious cultural relics, etc.
The Seven Pagoda Temple was founded in the 12th year of Tang Dazhong (858) and has a history of more than 1,000 years. The history of the Buddhist temple is not long, but its status is still very prominent. Qita Temple and Tiantong Temple, Ayuwang Temple, Yanqing Guanzong Temple and called the "Four Jungles of Buddhism in East Zhejiang", it is also the largest and most complete Buddhist monastery in Ningbo City.
Qita Temple is located at No. 183 Baizhang Road, Yinzhou District, Ningbo City. It is one of the four famous jungles in eastern Zhejiang. It is also the largest and best preserved temple in the city. The Qita Temple was built in 858 AD, known as Dongjin Temple, and later renamed "Qixin Temple", "Chongshou Temple", and "Louxin Temple".
Qita Temple is located at No. 183 Baizhang Road, Yinzhou District, Ningbo City. It is one of the four famous jungles in eastern Zhejiang and the largest and best preserved temple in the city. Built in 858 AD, it was called Dongjin Temple, and later renamed "Qixin Temple", "Chongshou Temple", "Louxin Temple". It was named after seven stone towers in front of the Kangxi Temple representing the seven Buddhas.
It is very clean, clean and beautiful, and there are few tourists, recommended.
Very good place worth a visit! ~~~~~~~............~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~......
Obviously it is not open, why is it open, there are many people running empty, irresponsible. [Cost-effective] [View] [Fun]
It is worth a visit here! More spiritual! In the city center! The location is particularly good!