Lion Grove Garden  (first built 1342, rebuilt 1918)     other sites in Suzhou    Suzhou, China

                                                    
Click on an image to enlarge

The Lion Grove garden was first built in 1342 by the Monk Tianru and other disciples in memory of their teacher, the monk Zhongfeng.  The garden is approximately 10,000 square meters and contains 22 pavilions, 71 steles, and numerous other works of art.  The garden is famous for its rockery, which is mostly made of limestone taken from Taihu lake.  The rocks have been piled up into forms resembling lions.  The name of the garden "Lion Grove," came from a reference to lions in a Buddhist story which included descriptions of a rocky place in a bamboo forest (resembling the garden).

In its early years, the garden was famous as a place of retreat for painters and calligraphers.  After Tianru's death, the garden passed through a number of hands and declined in later centuries.  It was revived in 1918 by a wealthy industrialist named Mr. Pei, but was given to the State after the founding of the People's Republic of China.

It is said that Emperor Qianlong (18th century) visited the site six times and inscribed the word "Zhenqu" (true delight) to describe the garden's beauty.  The inscription is still on display in a pavilion of the same name.

Bibliography

All images copyright 2002 by Yat-ling Ng

Wang, Joseph C.  Chinese Classical Gardens of Suzhou
  McGraw-Hill, Inc.  New York.  1993

http://www.travelchinaguide.com/attraction/jiangsu/suzhou/lion_grove.htm

http://china.muzi.net/travel/city/suzhou.htm

Click to Return Home