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The Ancient Bell Museum in Dazhong Temple is in northern
Haidian District, Beijing. Built in 1733 during the Ming Dynasty,
the Dazhong (giant bell) Temple) was originally named Juesheng Temple
and was where emperors presided over rituals praying for rain. The
local people preferred to call it the Dazhong Temple because it
housed a giant Buddhist bell cast in the Yongle Period (around 1420)
of the Ming Dynasty. The Ancient Bell Temple Museum is the only
one of its kind in China.
The museum has on display 700 or more bells, made of bronze, iron
and jade. The oldest dates back to the Western Zhou Period (C.1100-771
BC), and the most recent to the late Qing Dynasty and Republican
China. The museum bell exhibits are from China and overseas.
The gem of its collection is the Yongle Bell, a state-level cultural
relic that hangs in the Giant Bell Tower. At 5.6 meters in height,
and weighing 46.6 tons, making it one of the largest in the world,
this huge bell is lauded as King of Bells. It is engraved with over
100 Buddhist sutras and incantations that total more than 230,000
characters, and has a mellow and euphonious tone that carries over
a dozen kilometers. Having been created with consummate craftsmanship,
its structure is also technically perfect.
Today this ancient bell is still rung on significant days, such
as New Year, Spring Festival and other major celebrations. Its melodious
and powerful tones convey good wishes to people far and near.
The Qianlong Court Bell, another museum treasure, is designated
a grade one state-level relic. As its name suggests, the bell was
made for the imperial court. It has no inscriptions, but is engraved
with 22 dragons in diverse styles.
The Crane Pattern Bell is also a grade one state-level antique.
Measuring 1.7 meters in height and weighing 1.3 tons, it is a bronze
Taoist artifact. Embellished with engravings of cranes wreathed
in auspicious cloud, it incarnates the Taoist principles of carefreeness,
peace and grace.
The Tanzhe Temple Bell originally hung in the Tanzhe Temple, one
of Beijing's oldest Buddhist establishments. Founded in the Chenghua
Period of the Ming Dynasty, the bell is 0.47 meters high, 24.8 kilograms
in weight and has a 0.31-meter caliber. It is adorned with engravings
of two dragons playing with a pearl, and sutras in seal script,
and is testament to the former grandeur of the Tanzhe Temple.
The Shanyuan Nunnery Bell was commissioned by the fifteenth son
of Qing Emperor Kangxi in 1719. Its surface is decorated with intricate
patterns of entwined twigs, interlaced hydra designs and a 104-character
inscription. This bell manifests the supreme casting arts of ancient
China.
The Ancient Bell Museum stresses collaboration and exchange with
its counterparts across the world. In 2002 the museum and the Institute
of European Bell Art co-sponsored the highly successful "Sound
of the Dragon" Ancient Chinese Bell Exhibition in Paris. The
museum has also conducted research into ancient bells with the aid
of expertise in the field from France, Belgium, Italy, the USA,
the ROK and Japan. In a bid to boost cultural exchanges between
China and the ROK, it is planning a one hundred ancient Chinese
bells exhibition in the Republic of Korea in 2003.
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