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  • Emei Mountain

    Emei Mountain lies 7 km to the southwest of Emei county, Sichuan Province, and is one of the four famous Buddhist Mountains in China.
    Situated in the southwest of the Sichuan Basin, and with a temperate climate, Emeishan is luxuriantly green all the year round, and abounds in rainfalls, and rare and precious animals and plants. From the foot of the mountain to its summit, the Peak of Ten Thousand Buddhas, 3133 metres above sea level, the trail totals some 60 kilometres in length. It is endowed with unique changeable weather and marvelous natural beauty. Scenic spots and historic sites are found all over the places.

    Baoguo Monastery
    Enshrined is a graceful and animated porcelain statue of Buddha 3.4 metres high and made in AD 1475 (the 13th year of the yongle Reign in the Ming Dynasty). In front of the Seven Buddhas Hall, stands a 7 metre high and 14 storeyed Pageda cast in red copper, in the end of the 16th century. Over 4700 Buddhist statues and the whole contents of the Huayan Scriptures are sculptured upon it.

    Qingyin Tower
    It overlooks twin bridges to its front, arching a mountain stream each. Two identical pavilion tower aloft in between the bridges. Down bellow an exquisite pavilion posies on a rock by the name of Fenghuangzui (Phoenix Mouth). The two streams rush down from under the bridges and dash against a rock at their confluence with thunderous roars, sending up colorful and enchanting sprays.

    Hongchun Ping (A Level Ground)
    The construction here first began in the Jin Dynasty. The present monasteries were built in AD 1790. In the Grand Hall, suspending from the ceiling, is a metre high copper lantern, upon which over 300 Buddhist statues and nearly 100 flying dragons and lotus flowers were sculptured. They are noted for their vividness and superb workmanship. Surrounded by the mountains, Hongchun Ping is a place with lush forests and fresh air, and the monasteries built along the undulating mountainside have their towers and halls rising one upon another.

    Wanniansi (Monastery of Ten Thousand Years)
    There is a bronze statue of Samantabhadra seated on an elephant, 7.3 metres in height and weighing 62 tons. The statue, the lotus flowers as well as the elephant with six tusks are well proportioned, extremely vivid and truly fascinating. In the hall, a statue of cast iron is arrayed in each of 24 small shrines along the lower part of the four walls and 307 mini bronze statues are enshrined on the six tiers of cases on the upper part of the walls. They are fine works of art.

    Jinding (Golden Summit)
    The Top of One Thousand Buddhas, and the Top of Ten Thousand Buddhas rise up from the Emei summit, 3077 metres above sea level. From there one can enjoy a splendid sunrise view as well as a view of sea cloud. When Venus appears in the eastern sky at dawn break, the sun emerges in all its splendour. Out of the clear blue sky, cloud slowly rises up and in a few seconds, turns into a vast turbulent sea of clouds. The peaks and ridges, now visible, now hidden assume myriads of shapes like islands in the sea under the dazzling sunlight. In late afternoon, when wind and clouds calm down, the sunlight piercing through the thick clouds casts its reflections of innumerable colorful rings upon the rocks. "The rays of the light always follow you, and keep you in its glorious rings" is the unique feature of Buddhist Light.
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  • #2
    Emei Mountain is one of the Middle Kingdom's four famous Buddhist mountains. The original temple structures dated from as long ago as the advent of Buddhism itself in China; by the 14th century, the estimated 100 or so holy structures housed several thousand monks.
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    • #3
      Orographically, Mt. Emei sits at the western rim of the Sichuan Basin. The mountains west of it are known as Daxiangling. A large surrounding area of countryside is geologically known as the Permian Emeishan Large Igneous Province, a large igneous province generated by the Emeishan Traps volcanic eruptions during the Permian Period. At 3,099 metres (10,167 ft), Mt. Emei is the highest of the Four Sacred Buddhist Mountains of China.
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