Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - Xifeng tourist attractions

Xifeng tourist attractions

Xiwangshan, also known as Xishan, is located in the middle of Xifeng County, which is 3 kilometers away from the county seat/kloc-0, 85 kilometers away from Guiyang in the south and 90 kilometers away from Zunyi in the north. Guizun high-grade highway, Sichuan-Guizhou railway and 2 10 national highway pass through the mountains. Wangxi has a total area of 94 square kilometers, with an altitude of 1.220 meters, of which Tuanshanyan 1.6 1.6. 2 meters is the second highest peak in Xifeng.

Xiwangshan was under the jurisdiction of Shuixi Yi people in the late Ming Dynasty. At that time, Xiwangshan was barren and desolate, and its culture was not open. In the late Ming and early Qing dynasties, Master Song led his disciples to slash and burn, eat everything, invite local people, and pay equal attention to farming and Zen. Fourteen Lin Ji Zen temples with Fengchi Temple as the center have been built one after another, and the long-standing saying is that there are now eight. During the reign of Xianfeng and Tongzhi, fourteen temples were destroyed due to the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom Movement and the China Hor King (He Desheng) War. Although it has been repaired several times, today, only the remains of the monument and the broken tower are sleeping in the steep mountains, with abrupt peaks and vast bamboo seas.

Wang Xi has steep mountains, protruding peaks, deep valleys, towering old trees, rugged rocks, clear water waterfalls, vast bamboo sea, numerous temples and scenic spots, which are quite legendary. There are more than 220 species of woody plants in 77 families, including Liriodendron chinense, Eucommia ulmoides, Ginkgo biloba, Phoebe bournei, Bauhinia, and other rare plants, such as Cephalotaxus fortunei, Taxus mairei and Bambusa tetragona. Xiwangshan has the famous "Eight Great Scenes and Twenty-four Small Scenes", and even the "Eight Great Temples" built by monks in Ming and Qing Dynasties and the "Memorial Monument" in the fifth year of Yongle in Ming Dynasty. It was a Buddhist resort in southwest China during the Ming and Qing Dynasties and even the Republic of China, and had a far-reaching influence in Sichuan, Hunan, Hubei, Jiangsu and Zhejiang.

Eight scenic spots refer to natural landscapes and Buddhist cultural landscapes such as Fengchi Deng Chuan, Gotama Wenwen, Tianmen Haze, Yuhuaguan Waterfall, Songgu Night Bell, Songyu Pagoda, Tianque Qinglan, Wanhe Hu Song.

Twenty-four scenic spots refer to the single natural landscapes such as the bow on the bridge, the ladder with a hundred steps and ten stacks, the wonderful method of lion training, the fairy peak planned by General Shi, the fairyland on earth, thousands of books, the golden bell pool in the forest, the lotus falling for nine and a half days, and the sharp knife and thin ridge.

Eight temples refer to the eight most famous ancient temples in Xiwangshan, such as Huayan Temple, Qutan Temple, Fengchi Temple, zhifei Temple, Yuhua Temple, Dongshan Temple Temple, Hongji Temple and Manjuji Temple.