Qinglongdong Ancient Architectural Complex

Qinglongdong Ancient Architectural Complex (Chinese: 青龙洞古建筑群; pinyin: Qīnglóngdòng Gǔ Jiànzhù Qún) is located on the cliff of Mount Zhonghe (中和山; Zhōnghé Shān), and on the riverside of Wu River. Three religions, Buddhism, Taoism and Confucianism, co-exist in the Qinglongdong Ancient Architectural Complex, including Zhusheng Bridge, Zhongyuan Chan Temple, Ziyang Academy of Classical Learning (紫阳书院; Zǐyáng Shūyuàn), Qinglongdong, Wanshou Palace (万寿宫; Wànshòu Gōng; 'Longevity Palace'), and Xiangluyan (香炉岩; Xiānglú Yán; 'Incenses Burner Rock').[1]

Qinglongdong Ancient Architectural Complex
Traditional Chinese建築
Simplified Chinese建筑
Literal meaningCyan Dragon Cave Ancient Architectural Complex
Qinglongdong
Traditional Chinese
Simplified Chinese
Literal meaningCyan Dragon Cave

History edit

Qinglongdong Ancient Architectural Complex was first established in 1388, in the 21st year of Hongwu period (1368–1398) of the Ming dynasty (1368–1644). The complex covers an area of more than 3000 square meters. There are 36 single buildings, most of which are built close to the cliff of Mount Zhonghe.[1]

On 16 September 1981, it was designated as a cultural relics protection unit at county level. On 23 February 1982, it was inscribed as a cultural relics protection unit. In 1988, it was listed among the third batch of "Major National Historical and Cultural Sites in Guizhou" by the State Council of China.[1]

Gallery edit

Qinglongdong Ancient Architectural Complex in April 2014.

References edit

Bibliography edit

  • Editorial Committee (2004). 全国重点文物保护单位·第一至第五批·第III卷 [Major National Historical and Cultural Sites]. Cultural Relics Publishing House. ISBN 7-5010-1525-2.

27°03′13″N 108°25′42″E / 27.05361°N 108.42833°E / 27.05361; 108.42833