General Gengma Buddhist Temple Tower, known as Baita and Jinta in ancient times, is located 500 meters southwest of Gengma County, Lincang. Contemporary new stupa.
The temple is a Buddhist temple spread to the south, named after the Buddhist temple under its jurisdiction. It is also called Guanmian Temple ("Wahiri Zhao Meng" in Dai language). It was built in Qianlong period of Qing Dynasty (A.D. 177 1) and rebuilt in Xianfeng period of Qing Dynasty (A.D.1851-KLOC-0/8). The building of the General Buddhist Temple consists of the Giant Buddha Hall, the Tang Jie, the Buddhist Temple, the Sutra Pavilion and the White Pagoda. Among them, the Great Buddha Hall is well preserved, which is the focus of repair and reconstruction in past dynasties. The existing hall faces east from east to west, with five rooms wide and nine rooms deep; It is the top of the mountain with triple eaves, with winding slopes in front of the main hall and cloisters around it. Sumitomo is 40 meters long and 20 meters wide, and its belt is carved with various auspicious patterns such as rolling grass, flowers, birds and animals with national and local characteristics. The temple gate is carved and beautifully decorated, which is an important physical example to study the spread and influence of Buddhism in Gengma. Mr. Zhao Puchu, President of the Chinese Buddhist Association, wrote the name of "Gengma General Buddhist Temple" in regular script for the temple.
1999, the people's government of Gengma County announced that General Gengma Buddhist Temple Tower was a county-level cultural relics protection unit.
On June 6th, 2006, lincang Municipal People's Government announced the second batch of cultural relics protection units.
Lincang Gengma General Buddhist Temple Tower
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