Photo Gallery

Jiming Temple (6th century site, 20th century buildings)

Jiming Temple was founded nearly 1,500 years ago during the Liang dynasty, when the emperor ordered the construction of "Tongtai temple" atop Jilong hill. Tongtai, which means "unity then peace" was a phrase borrowed from the Sanskrit Buddhist sutras. Since then, the temple has frequently changed names as portions of the temple were repeatedly destroyed and rebuilt. During one such episode in the Chen dynasty, the Emperor hid with his favorite concubines inside one of the temple wells. As Sui soldiers smashed through the gates of Nanking, the Emperor and his concubines languished in the well until the walls of the well ran with red from the concubine's powdered faces. From that time, the well has been called the "rouge well" or "disgrace well."

None of the buildings are very old. A disastrous fire ripped through the temple in 1973, destroying all of the historic structures. Reconstruction began in the 1980s and was largely completed by 1989.

Bibliography:

All images copyright 2001 Professor Kerk L. Phillips of Brigham Young University, Utah, USA

Boyd, Andrew. Chinese Architecture and Town Planning: 1500 B.C. - A.D. 1911
  Holmesdale Press Ltd, 1962. London

Visit Kerk L. Phillips' website at http://temple.pomosa.com/


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Shanghai Travel Guide posted on Sun Nov 06, 2011 11:47 pm:

I had planned on just walking through on my way to the city walls but was pleasantly surprised and intrigued by the Temple itself. Anything but a tourist attraction, this appeared to me to be a functioning place of worship first and foremost; I believe it is the busiest in the city. I was able to visit various Buddha statues, light some incense, and watch a few formal religious services before passing through to the city walls. There is a vegetarian restaurant here and some places to buy religious artifacts and such, but for the most part this was a place I experienced by osmosis more than anything. A bit off the beaten path but worth a visit if you want to experience a part of the real culture and maybe climb a pagoda (closed when I went) or stroll on the ramparts of the wall as a bonus. Recommended.

Website: http://www.cityknown.com