James Baquet jamesbaquet@gmail.com MY next visit wasn’t on my list of temples, but was not to be missed. Yungang (Cloud Ridge) Grottoes is one of the four great Buddhist cave sites, and the third I’ve seen (I still haven’t been to the complexes in Gansu, but enjoyed Longmen and Dazu before this trip). Yungang is a World Heritage Site, and only 15 kilometers or so from central Datong — a reasonable taxi ride, and I took the bus for the return trip. Like many world-class sites in China, the area has undergone a great deal of development: a huge visitor’s plaza with Tang-style buildings and a newly built temple on a lake island stand between the vehicle drop-off and the caves themselves. At last I reached the caves. Constructed in three phases in the 5th and 6th centuries — when Datong was a capital of the Northern Wei Dynasty (386-534) — they comprise about 250 grottoes and by some counts over 50,000 figures. Although one main section was closed for restoration while I was there, I was still able to see plenty. The two most spectacular caves I saw — Numbers Five and Six — had a superstructure built out in front of them in 1621. Inside is one of the most magical environments I have ever been in. Not a surface is left undecorated, with Buddhas, bodhisattvas, Hindu gods — all manner of unearthly beings gracing the walls. Other grottoes are open-faced: the viewer stands outside and looks in. Still others are “window” types — standing far back, one looks up and sees the head of a large Buddha statue looking down from inside. Also nearby are several smaller temples and some ruins of the Great Wall. |