Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel accommodation - "If you fly in the air, you will immediately fall into the mountains." The horseshoe temple in Zhangye is so high, how was it built?

"If you fly in the air, you will immediately fall into the mountains." The horseshoe temple in Zhangye is so high, how was it built?

Horseshoe Temple was built by people through holes in cliffs in the past. As we all know, horseshoe temple is built on some cliffs, but when you go up, you will find many large and small holes on the cliffs, and some holes have a lot of space.

People built magnificent horseshoe-shaped temples in these relatively large caves. During the construction process, these holes are still connected, so some building materials can be transported up with these holes. In addition, there are many cliff walls that are not very steep, and some stone walls have very gentle slopes. The ancients who built the horseshoe temple could also slowly transport building materials along the hillside, thus completing the construction of the horseshoe temple.

Horseshoe Temple was first built in Beiliang during the Sixteen Countries Period of the Eastern Jin Dynasty, and it has been 1600 years. But in such a long history, sadly, due to the separatist regime in the north at that time, the whole region was in chaos, dynasties rose and fell, and many large buildings in horseshoe temple were destroyed by war. The beauty of horseshoe temple is that there are about 500 grottoes in the Thousand Buddha Cave, which can shock people at a glance.

Puguang Temple has thirty-three days of caves and five floors of 2 1 caves, which are arranged in a pagoda shape. It is very rare that the Jinta Temple in the Buddhist temple is a large-scale meat carving flying in the sky, which looks exquisite and simple. There is a cloister on the cliff outside, and the grottoes inside and outside the cave are 49 holes, which looks very strange. Horseshoe Temple has a beautiful environment, beautiful mountains and clear waters, and strange peaks and caves, which can be said to be the four major symbols of Horseshoe Temple. Visitors can also live in local Yugur tents, drink highland barley wine and eat hand-grabbed meat, and experience the rich historical atmosphere of Horseshoe Temple while eating, drinking and having fun.