| The
city of Kaifeng is one ht East Henan Plain south of the
Yellow River. During the Spring and Autumn Period, the
place became the fief of Duke Zaung (757-701 B.C.) of
the State of Zheng, who started to build a city and named
it Kaifeng, meaning "opening up new territory."
It was also called Bianliang after the Warring States
Period (475-221 B.C.).
Kaifeng
served as capital for seven feudalist dynasties in Chinese
history. Ad one of the "six great capitals"
of China, together with Beijing, Xi' an, Nanjing, Luoyang,
and Hangzhou, it used to be a very prosperous city, especially
during the Northern Song Dynasty (A.D. 960-1127). The
grandeur and prosperity of Kaifeng is vividly presented
in a classical painting, "River Scene at Qingming
Festival," by the well-known artist Zhang Zeduan
of the Northern Song Dynasty.
However,
the former splendor of Kaifeng was gradually diminished
by wars and Yellow River floods. Today, many cultural
relics and ruins remain, and part of the city is being
reconstructed to resemble old Kaifeng as it looked like
in the Song Dynasty. When the work is finished, the historic
old city will become an important stop on the tourist's
itinerary.
As
an old cultural center, Kaifeng is well known for its
silk products and embroidery.
King
Yu's Terrace (Yuwangtai)
This
terrace in southeast Kaifeng is also known as Music Terrace
in memory of a blind musician, Shi Kuang, who is said
to have played music here 2,600 years ago.
During
the Ming Dynasty (A.D. 1368 -1644), Kaifeng was repeatedly
flooded when the Yellow River overflowed its banks. To
commemorate King Yu, the legendary leader of the Xia Dynasty
(c. twenty-second-seventeenth centuries), who devoted
his wife to the taming of the flood, the people renamed
the place King Yu's Terrace and erected a bronze statue
of King Yu on the spot.
Major
buildings on King Yu's Terrace include the King's Library
(Yushulou), Temple of Three Saints (Sanxiansi), King Yu's
Temple, and the Water Virtue Temple (Shuidesi). King Yu's
Temple is said to have housed a statue of King Yu and
some of his tools used in flood control. The Temple of
Three Saints was built in memory of the three great poets
of the Tang Dynasty, Li bai, Du Fu, and Gao Shi, who cane
here to compose poems while drinking wine in the spring
of 744. At the back of the temple, there is a pavilion
which houses a tablet bearing inscriptions of Emperor
Qian Long (1736-1795) of the Qing Dynasty written on one
of his inspection tours.
Prime
Minister's Tempel (Xiangguosi)
One
of the most famous temples of China stands in the center
of Kaifeng. Built in 555 during the Northern QI Dynasty
(550-577), it has a history of over 1,400 years. It was
reconstructed and enlarged during the Tand and Song dynasties;
destroyed by a Yellow River flood at the end of the Ming
Dynasty (1368-1644), it was reconstructed again at the
beginning of the Qing Dynasty.
The
main structures of the temple are the Grand Hall, the
Octagonal Hall, the east and west chambers, and other
buildings holding Buddhist sutras.
Inside
the Octagonal Hall there is a wooden statue of the Goddess
of Mercy with many hands and eyes which was carved during
the reign of Emperor Qian Long (1736 -1795) of the Qing
Dynasty and which is regarded as a masterpiece of wood
carving from that era.
Iron
Pagoda
Located
in Iron Pagoda Park in the northeast part of the city,
this structure was built in 1049 during the Northern Song
Dynasty. With a history of more than nine hundred years,
it is one of the earliest constructions made of glazed
bricks and tiles in China. It got its name from the iron-gray
color of its glazed bricks. The octagonal pagoda is fifty-five
meters high (with its foundation buried in silt from the
Yellow River) and has thirteen levels. Although it was
constructed of glazed bricks of different shapes and sizes,
it looks very much like a huge wooden pillar, with carved
patterns of Buddhas, flowers, human figures and legendary
animals, all representing the highly developed workmanship
of the Song Dynasty. The top of the pagoda affords a good
view of the whole city of Kaifeng.
Standing
on a hill, north of the Henan University in the northeastern
part of the city, the pagoda was first built in 982 (during
the Song Dynasty). It is a Buddhist pagoda where the finger
bone of a dignitary is kept.
The
pagoda, made of an entire timber frame, was kept in Kaibao
Temple when it was originally built. Later in 1049, the
surface of the pagoda was covered with iron-colored glazed
tiles and it gained the name Iron Pagoda. The temple was
renamed several times in the successive periods and was
finally pulled down during the Qing Dynasty.
The
thirteen-story pagoda rises to about sixty meters with
an entire timber frame interior. On the brick basement
are exquisite carved patterns of animals, Buddhist motifs
and flora. It has stood for over 900 years and remains
intact.A park has been built for the pagoda to which several
halls and temples have been added. It provides a good
venue for the appreciation of Chinese carvings, inscriptions
and color-painted statues.
Dragon
Pavilion
This
splendid building in the northwest corner of the city
was originally the site of the imperial palace of the
Northern Song Dynasty. The present building was reconstructed
in 1692 during the Qing Dynasty. Standing on a thirteen-meter-high
brick foundation, it is covered with golden glazed tiles
and has graceful upturned eaves. On a slanting stone halfway
up the seventy-two steps which lead to a raised platform
in front of the building, there are some vague horseshoe
outlines among the carved dragon patterns. According to
an old legend, the horseshoe prints were left by Emperor
Tai Zu, Zhao Kuangyin (727-976), of the Song Dynasty when
he rode up the steps on horseback.
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