James Baquet jamesbaquet@gmail.com MY next trip was a long one, stretching over 14 days and comprising nearly 30 sites. I traveled from Datong in the far north up to Wutai Mountain, down to Taiyuan, then to Zhaoxian and finally Zhengding in Shijiazhuang. My arrival in Datong was complicated by the construction of new “ancient” city walls. My hotel was inside the walls near my first destination, and as the airport bus couldn’t enter I ended up walking a couple of kilometers before settling. The inconvenience was made up for the next day because from hotel to temple was about a three-minute walk! Huayan Temple was built in 1062 during the Liao Dynasty, and was a national capital during both the Liao and Jin periods. Despite the depredations of war, it has an abundance of ancient halls and statuary. It is divided into two areas, designated Upper and Lower Huayan Temple, lying side by side. Each has its own main hall, and both are oriented toward the east. The main hall of Upper Huayan is huge — over 1,550 square meters — and has five enormous Buddha statues. Twenty large Deva Kings lean in toward them, 10 from either side, with well-preserved Qing-Dynasty frescoes behind them. The main hall at Lower Huayan is much humbler, but contains some of the best ancient statuary I’ve seen in China. It is also a sutra library with many ancient texts in equally ancient book cabinets. There are other halls on the grounds, many of them quite new with (to my eye, rather gaudy) statues. But there is a new set of 18 Arhats in the lower temple that is well worth seeing. |