Search for inner peace in Yonghegong Lamasery
Visitors burn incense and worship in Yonghegong Lamasery in Beijing during this Spring Festival. The lamasery was flooded with at least 10,000 visitors on the first day of the Lunar New Year, photo by Lu Zhongqiu, China Daily.
The Yonghegong Lamasery is located in the northeast of Beijing and covers a space of 660,000 square metres. It looks like an imperial palace with its red walls and yellow roofing tiles. It is the largest Buddhist temple of the Yellow-sect of Tibetan Buddhism in Beijing and has been completely preserved.
Built in 1694 as the residence of Count Yin Zhen, the fourth son of the Emperor Kangxi, it was called "the Palace of Count Yong." After Yin Zhen became the Emperor, he continued to use it as an imperial palace for short stays away from the capital. In 1744, it was converted into a lamasery.
Yonghegong is the most renowned Tibetan Buddhist temple in China outside Tibet and holds treasures of both the Han and Tibetan cultures.
Yonghegong stands facing south. The building is very grand and has a unique character and its Buddhist statues are very precious. It consists of an archway and five grand halls in addition to another four academic halls on either side - the Hall of Teaching Buddhist Scripture, the Hall of the Esoteric Sect, the Hall of Mathematics, and the Hall of Medicine. The layout of the complex is influenced by a combination of traditional Han, Tibetan, Manchu, and Mongolian architecture. The Hall of Falun houses the huge white statue of Buddha made of one massive piece of sandalwood. This and the Buddhist Shrine in the Zhaofo Tower carved from nanmu are the two most precious wood carvings of the Yonghegong Lamasery.
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