Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - Who knows about Xingping Temple?

Who knows about Xingping Temple?

Xingping Temple is located in Tielu Village, Tuji Township, southeast of Luochuan County, Shaanxi Province, more than 70 years away from the county seat. According to legend, this place was the place where the overlords of Chu stationed troops, practiced martial arts, and made weapons. According to the inscription in the 46th year of Emperor Kangxi's reign in the Qing Dynasty (1707 AD), Xingping Temple was founded in the Ding Chou year of Chongzhen in the Ming Dynasty (1637 AD). According to the stele record, the temple was destroyed by fire and has disappeared. Now only the ruins and the inscription on the stele were rebuilt in the 46th year of Kangxi reign. The temple originally housed a huge water and land silk painting painted by Li Rishi, a Confucian instructor in Hancheng County during the first month of the Xinwei lunar month (AD 1691) in the 30th year of Emperor Kangxi's reign in the Qing Dynasty (AD 1691). Sixty-two of them are now in existence. When the temple was burned down, thanks to the monks' rescue, it was fortunately preserved in the world. It is a precious cultural relic left over from the Qing Dynasty. It has changed hands several times and is now preserved in the Luochuan County Museum.