Chongsheng (崇圣)
Chinese. Name of a
Vajrayana Buddhist temple located on a hilltop in Dali, in
China's southern
Yunnan Province. It has a huge 5-door
paifang-like gate, i.e. a traditional Chinese-style architectural edifice in the form of a decorated archway. At his gate are giant statues of
Ha Jiang (fig.),
a muscular, fierce-looking door guardian, often found at
Buddhist-Taoist
temple entrances across Asia. He is typically paired
with
Heng Jiang
(fig.), i.e. the ‘Snorting General’, who is usually placed to the opposite side of Ha Jiang, one facing the other. There is also a
giant statue of the
bodhisattva
Vajrapani
in one of his various
tantric
forms, as a
fearsome protector deity, with a black complexion,
multiple arms, and wearing a string of humans skulls. He
is one of the
Eight Great Bodhisattvas
(fig.). His
attributes
consist of
a
vajra,
a bell or
ghanta,
a
trident,
a rope,
and a long green
snake,
as well as
a golden snake that is coiling around his trident. Tough originally from the 9th century AD, this (in the past royal) monastery was destroyed by fire some time during the Qing Dynasty and rebuilt in 2005. The temple is sited up a hill at the same location as the Three
Pagodas of Dali (fig.). On a platform in between Chongsheng Temple and the Three Pagodas, are two large pavilions, housing 500 life-sized gilded statues of the Five Hundred
Arahats,
akin to the Lingyin
Temple (fig.) near Hangzhou. They are
believed to be either the 500 disciples that were
present when the Buddha expounded the Flower Sutra on
Vultures Peak
or the 500
rich merchants (fig.), who became beggars after meeting the
Buddha and
accepting his teachings. One of the more outstanding is a giant statue of the
luohan
Changshou (fig.), the Long-armed
Arahat, who is
one of the
Eighteen Arahats
and also known as
Panthaka.
He has the magical property to grow his arms as long as
he wants them to be (fig.), enabling him to help others. In Chinese, referred to as Chongsheng Si (崇圣寺), i.e. Chongsheng Temple.
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