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Baima (White Horse) Temple is situated in the east of
Luoyang City, Henan Province, and is the first Chinese place where
Buddhist rites were performed. In 1983, it was designated as one
of national key temples in the areas of the Han nationality.
It is said that Baima Temple got its name from a story. An emperor
in the Han Dynasty (206BC-220) dreamed of a gold man and then ordered
in the 10th year (67) of the Yongping reign to seek Buddhist doctrines
from the Western Regions. The obtained Buddhist scriptures and statues
were carried back to Luoyang on the back of white horses; therefore,
a temple named Baima (White Horse) was built in the 11th year (68)
of the Yongping reign. In the past two thousand years, Baima Temple
experienced several rises and declines. Among all reconstructions
of past dynasties, the scale of reconstruction in the first year
(685) of the Chuigong reign of the Tang Dynasty (618-907) was the
largest. Now, the temple mainly keeps the overall arrangement of
the one reconstructed in the 35th year (1556) of the Jiajing reign
of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644).
Now Baima Temple covers an area of 40,000 square meters. Its main
buildings include Heavenly King Hall, Great Buddha Hall, and Main
Hall. Among these halls, the Main Hall is the most magnificent one
and houses statues of three Buddhas (Maitreya, Prabhutaratna and
Sakyamuni) and 18 arhats. These statues are vivid with different
expressions and postures. A big bell is hung in the Great Buddha
Hall. It is interesting that due to similarity of temperament, when
the bell rings, the bell in the Bell Tower in Luoyang City, 25 li(1li=
500m) away from Baima Temple, will also ring. At zero o'clock midnight
of New Year's Day each year, people always come here to ring the
bell.
There is one tomb each at the southeastern and southwestern corners
of the temple respectively where two accomplished monks from India
were buried. A pagoda named Qiyun Pagoda of about 200 meters once
stood at the southeast of Baima Temple. This pagoda was destroyed
in the Song Dynasty (960-1279) by war and in the 15thyear of the
Dading reign of the Jin Dynasty (1115-1234), a 13-storeyed square
pagoda was built at the same place, and the pagoda is called Baima
Temple Pagoda now. The pagoda has a unique style, and is of high
artistic value as well as one of a few ancient buildings of the
Jin Dynasty extant in the Chinese Central Plains.
Baima Temple is the earliest place where Buddhist scriptures were
translated during the initial stage of dissemination of Buddhist
doctrines in China. Here, Kashyapamtanga and Dharmaraksha, two accomplished
Indian monks, translated the first Buddhist Scripture into Chinese
from Sanskrit:The Sutra in Forty-two Sections Spoken by the Buddha.
Afterwards, Dharmakala translated the first commandment into Chinese
from Sanskrit:Buddhist Disciplines for Monks. Since then, China
has had formal Buddhist disciplines. According to historical records,
such ancient accomplished monks and sutra translation masters from
the Western Regions as An Shih Kao, Zhu Fulang, and An Xuan once
also translated Buddhist scriptures into Chinese in Baima Temple.
They translated large volumes of Buddhist scriptures. Along with
spread of these works, Chinese Buddhism gradually reached its zenith
in the Sui and Tang dynasties (581-907).
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