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Pagoda of Fugong Temple : ウィキペディア英語版
Pagoda of Fogong Temple

The Sakyamuni Pagoda of Fogong Temple () of Ying County, Shanxi province, China, is a wooden Chinese pagoda built in 1056, during the Khitan-led Liao Dynasty. The pagoda was built by Emperor Daozong of Liao (Hongji) at the site of his grandmother's family home.〔Steinhardt (1997), 20.〕 The pagoda, which has survived several large earthquakes throughout the centuries, reached a level of such fame within China that it was given the generic nickname of the "Muta" ().〔Steinhardt (1997), 103.〕〔Steinhardt (1994), 8.〕
The pagoda stands on a 4 m (13 ft) tall stone platform, has a 10 m (33 ft) tall steeple, and reaches a total height of 67.31 m (220.83 ft) tall; it is the oldest existent fully wooden pagoda still standing in China.〔Chinadaily.com.cn (2003).(Sakyamuni Pagoda at Fogong Temple ). Ministry of Culture. Retrieved on 2008-01-25.〕〔 Although it is the oldest fully wooden pagoda in China, the oldest existent pagoda is the 6th century Songyue Pagoda (made of brick); the oldest existent wooden buildings in China are the Buddhist temple halls found at Mount Wutai, which date back to the mid Tang Dynasty (618–907).〔Steinhardt (2004), 128–154.〕
==History==

The Pagoda of Fogong Temple was built south of the Liao Dynasty capital at Datong.〔Steinhardt (1994), 12.〕 The ''Gujin Tushu Jicheng'' encyclopedia published in 1725—written during the reigns of Kangxi and Yongzheng in the Qing—states that a different pagoda built between the years 936–943 stood previously at the site before the present one of 1056 was built.〔 The same statement appears in the ''Shanxi tongzhi'' (Record of Shanxi Province) and the ''Yingzhou xuzhi'' (Record of Ying Prefecture, Continued).〔 The ''Yingzhou zhi'' (Record of Ying Prefecture)—edited by Tian Hui during the reign of the Wanli Emperor (r. 1572–1620) of the Ming Dynasty—states that the pagoda was funded and erected in 1056 by a Buddhist monk named Tian.〔〔Kuhn (2000), 332.〕 In compiling a record for Ying County, Tian Hui of the late Ming Dynasty researched the history of the pagoda and recorded the history of its repairs in his ''Zhongxiu Fogongsi ta zhi''.〔 The placard on the third story of the pagoda listed that periodic repairs were conducted in the years 1195 and 1471.〔 While piecing together the history of the pagoda, Tian Hui never came across any information to suggest that the pagoda had a predecessor built from 936 to 943, as other texts suggest.〔
In confirming the date of 1056 and not the years 936–943, Zhang Yuhuan writes in his ''Zhongguo gudai jianzhu jishu shi'' (1985) that the Wenwu Laboratory determined various wooden components from the second to fifth floors of the pagoda to be 930 to 980 years old.〔Steinhardt (1994), 12, footnote 31.〕 Other evidence to suggest the later date includes the fact that the foster mother of Emperor Xingzong was a native of Yingzhou.〔 Xingzong's son Hongji (Emperor Daozong) was also raised in Ying County due to his following of the Khitan custom of raising Yelu clan sons within the families of their mothers.〔 Hongji was also known as a devout Buddhist; the pagoda (following the tradition of the stupa) symbolized the death of the Buddha, which Hongji might have associated with his deceased father, the Xingzong Emperor.〔 Steinhardt writes "only something like the memory of an imperial youth might account for the construction of such a phenomenal building in such an out-of-the way place."〔 Also, the 1050s was a decade which marked the end of a Buddhist ''kalpa'', which would signify the Pagoda of Fogong Temple as an "ultimate death shrine to the Buddha of the age," according to historian Nancy Steinhardt.〔Steinhardt (1994), 14.〕 This occurred at roughly the same time in which Fujiwara no Yorimichi of Japan converted the Phoenix Hall of his father Fujiwara no Michinaga's residence at Byōdō-in into a temple meant to guide souls into the Buddhist afterlife (according to Pure Land Buddhism).〔
The pagoda was placed at the center of the temple grounds,〔Steinhardt (1994), 12, 13.〕 which used to be called Baogong Temple until its name was changed to Fogong in 1315 during the Yuan Dynasty.〔Steinhardt (1994), 13.〕 Although the size of the temple grounds were described as being gigantic during the Jurchen-led Jin dynasty (1115–1234), the temple began to decline during the Ming Dynasty.〔
The ''Yingzhou zhi'' records that there was a total of seven earthquakes between the years 1056 and 1103, yet the tower stood firm.〔 In its entire history before the 20th century, the pagoda needed only ten minor repairs.〔 However, considerable repairs were needed after Japanese soldiers shot more than two hundred rounds into the pagoda during the Second Sino-Japanese War.〔 While repairing the pagoda in 1974, renovators found Liao Dynasty texts of Buddhist sutras and other documents. This major discovery included the 12 scroll Liao Tripitaka () printed with movable type in 1003 in Yanjing (present-day Beijing), 35 scrolls of scriptures with block printed text the longest being 33.3 meters in length, and 8 handwritten scrolls.〔Ma Liang, 2010, 41-42〕 This attests to the widespread technological use of movable type printing that developed within the neighboring Song Dynasty. Also, in 1974 a Buddha tooth relic was discovered hidden in one of the Buddha statues on the fourth level of the Pagoda.〔

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