| Xi'an,
the capital of Shaanxi Province, is situated on the Weihe
River between the Qinling mountain range to the south
and a loess plateau to the north. It lies in a fertile
valley crisscrossed by the eight tributaries of the Weihe
River system.
Xi'an
is famous throughout the world for its archaeological
treasures and rich cultural heritage. It was the home
of "Lantian Man," who lived some 600,000 years
ago, and of a Neolithic community (four thousand to five
thousand years old) whose remains have been found in what
is now called Banpo Village.
Xi'an
leads to the western regions and commands the central
plains in the east-because of this important geographical
location, it was the capital of eleven imperial dynasties,
whose splendor is visible in the area to this day.
During
the Middle Ages, Xi'an was one of the biggest cities in
the world and a center of international trade. The famous
Silk Road started here, traversed the Middle East, and
ended at the Mediterranean. The bustling metropolis was
host to thousands of foreign envoys, students, monks,
and merchants, who all converged on the city from Southeast
Asia and beyond.
Today,
Xi'an is a major industrial center. But is it the brilliant
ancient relics assembles here that people come to see,
in what is sometimes called the "cradle of Chinese
civilization."
Forest
of Stone Steles Museum
Once
the site of the Temple of Confucius during the Northern
Song dynasty (960--1127), the Forest of Stone Steles Museum
is situated on Sanxue Street, near the south gate of Xian
City Wall. It was initially established in AD 1087 when
some precious stone steles were moved here for safe keeping,
including the "Classic on Filial Piety" written
by Emperor Xuanzong in AD 745 and "the Kaicheng Stone
Steles" arved in AD 837. With an area of 31,000 square
meters, the Forest of Stone Steles used to be the principal
museum for Shaanxi Province since 1944. Then because of
the large number of stone steles, it was officially named
as the Forest of Stone Steles Museum in 1992.
Xianyang
Terra-cotta Museum
Reconstructed
and opened to the public in 1962, Xianyang museum, based
on a Confucian temple of the Ming dynasty, is one of the
famous museums in China. It, covering an exhibition area
of 1216 sqm, consists of 9 showrooms and a stele corridor,
with over 15,000 cultural relics, out of which 4,000 are
on display.
No.
1 showroom mainly displays axes, potteries and cuspidal-bottom
bottles of Neolithic era. Some bronze weapons such as
spears, daggers, swords and halberds are also demonstrated
here.
No.
2 exhibiting hall mainly shows the articles unearthed
from Xianyang Qin palace, which include model of the Qin
palace, air bricks and some construction materials.
No.
3 exhibiting hall shows murals from Xianyang Qin palace,
revealing the thriving and prosperous condition of the
Qin Empire.
No.
4 exhibiting hall exhibit paintings and calligraphies
of contemporary celebs. The famous Han terra cotta army
is showing in the fifth and sixth exhibiting halls. Powerful
and sturdy, they fully express the mighty military power
of the West Han dynasty. No.7, No. 8 and No. 9 halls display
the biggest copper Buddha of the Ming dynasty and some
religionary relics. A newly built stele corridor gathers
about 100 famous steles, showing the high calligraphy
art of the ancient times.
Admission
Fee: 21
Wild
Goose Pagoda
Famen
Temple
In
China, many temples house treasures and artifacts, but
the sheer quantity and quality of treasures in the Famen
Temple is rare. Situated in Famen Town of Fufeng County,
about 120 kilometers (about 74.57 miles) west of Xian,
Famen Temple is renowned for storing the veritable four
slivers of the finger bone of the Sakyamuni Buddha.
Famen
Temple was established in the Eastern Han Dynasty (25--220),
for carrying forward Buddhism. The most representative
structures in the temple are the Famen Temple Pagoda and
Famen Temple Museum.
At
the center of the temple is the 13-tiered octagonal pagoda
under which it is said, a sliver of the finger bone of
Sakyamuni buried. In 1981, subsidence of the pagoda led
to reconstruction, during which, an Underground Palace
was discovered unexpectedly in 1987. Many royal treasures
and jewellery were found here-more than 2,000 pieces surrounded
the Tang mandala (geometric designs, usually circular,
symbolizing the universe). The most precious are the four
slivers of veritable finger bone of the Sakymuni Buddha.
At present, this is the biggest Buddhist underground palace
so far discovered. From the grand architectural style,
it is said to have been established in the Tang Dynasty
(618-907). But why, and how such precious treasures were
stored under the pagoda. Tracing back to a most flourishing
time in Chinese history, formerly, Famen Temple was the
royal temple during the Sui Dynasty (581-618) and Tang
Dynasty. Emperors in Sui and Tang believed that enshrining
and worshiping the bone of Sakyamuni would bring riches
and peace to the land and its people. So an offering of
treasure to the finger bone was made, it was housed in
the Underground Palace.
Due
to the appropriate collection and further expounding of
the cultural connotations of the treasures to the public,
the Famen Temple Museum was established in 1987, which
includes most of the precious treasures from the Tang
Dynasty removed from Underground Palace, including gold
and silverware, colored glaze ware, porcelain and silks.
Owing to more and more tourists and their curiosity to
the relics, two new exhibition halls were established
in 2000. The exhibition area expanded from 500 square
meters to 3,000 square meters, which well caters for the
interest of tourists.
Nowadays,
this, the most famous Buddhist temple, Famen Temple, plays
a sovereign role in Chinese religion, and appeals to tourists
from all over the world.
Greater
Wild goose Pagoda (Dayanta)
Located
within the compound of the Monastery of Grace (Ci'ensi)
in the city's southern suburbs, this pagoda was built
in A.D. 652 to house Buddhist scriptures that had been
brought from India by Xuan Zang, an eminent monk of the
Tang Dynasty. The wood-and brick structure is sixty-four
meters high and has seven stories.
Lesser
Wild Goose Pagoda (Xiaoyanta)
This
pagoda is within the compound of Fortune Offering Temple
(Jianfusi), one kilometer south of the city. Built in
A.D. 684, the square pagoda is an elegant brick structure
with closely arrange eaves; it is forty-three meters high
and has thirteen stories.
Forest
of Stelae (Beilin)
Located
on Sanxue Street in the city, this treasure trove of ancient
Chinese calligraphy and art is part of the Shaanxi Provincial
Museum. It was built in A.D.1096 and has more than a thousand
stellar on display in various halls and galleries.
Bell
Tower (Zhonglou)
The
huge bell in this tower used to toll the hour in ancient
times. Initially built in A.D. 1384, the two-stories structure
is thirty-six meters high and has three layers of eaves
in typical Ming style. The tower commands a fine view
of the city.
Xi'an
City Wall
This
battlement, built in A.D. 1370-1378, is one of the best-preserved
ancient walls in China. Surrounded by a moat, it has a
circumference of 11.9 kilometers and is 12 meters high,
18 meters wide at the base, and 15 meters wide at the
top. The interior of the wall was made of rammed earth,
and the exterior of bricks.
Qin
Shi Huang's Buried Legion
While
digging a well in 1974, farmers from Yanzhai Commune unearthed
some brown pottery fragments, which led to the discovery
of one of the most spectacular archaeological finds of
the century the buried terra cotta army of the first
emperor of the Qin Dynasty. The vaults containing the
sculptured legion are located at he eastern flank of his
tomb in Lintong County northeast of Xi'an. So far, three
underground vaults have been discovered. Vault One, the
biggest of the three measures 5 meters high, 230 meters
long from east to west, and 62 meters wide from north
to south, covering an area of more than 14, 000 square
meters. Thousands of life-sized terra cotta warriors lined
up in battle array with horse-drawn chariots have been
excavated. The warriors are of a fairly uniform height
of 1.8 meters. With their individual features and facial
expressions, they are amazingly lifelike. Visitors have
called this awesome sight the "eight wonder of the
world."
In
addition to the terra cotta figures, many finely executed
bronze horses and chariots have been unearthed on the
western flank of the Qin tomb. Half life-size, these figures
are highly detailed and realistic.
Maoling
Museum
Maoling
was the magnificent tomb of Han Emperor Wu Di (156-87
B.C.) in Xingping County west of Xi'an. The south gate
has been destroyed, but the front gate is dimly visible.
The tomb of the famous general Huo Qubing (147-117 B.C.)
is also found at Maoling. The valiant general had repulsed
many incursions by the Xiongnus and became an illustrious
war hero during the Han Dynasty. Emperor Wu Di was so
grieved over Huo's death that he ordered a tomb built
for the general near his own. Maoling Museum was built
on this spot in 1978; burial objects and other relics
of the Han Dynasty are on display here. The massive stone
carvings that stand in front of the tomb of Huo Qubing
are among the finest examples of Chinese art.
Zhaoling
Zhaoling
is the tomb of Li Shimin (599-649), the second Tang Emperor
known as Tai Zong. It is located on Jiujun Mountain in
Liquan County northwest of Xi'an. Jiujun Mountain rises
1,188 meters above sea level and is flanked by undulating
mountain ranges to the east and west. Occupying an imposing
on a mountainside. Surrounded by more than 160 tombs of
high-ranking court officials and generals, Zhaoling covers
an area of 20,000 hectares with a circumference of 10
kilometers. The stone carving "Six Steeds at Zhaoling"
is one of the best examples of Tang Dynasty sculpture.
The lifelike carving represents the six horses that carried
the first Tang Emperor Tai Zong to victory in the battles
that brought the country under his rule.
Qianling
Located
on the northern peak of Liangshan Mountain in Qianxian
County, Qianling was the tomb of the Tang Emperor Gao
Zong (650-683) and his consort, Empress Wu Zetian (624-705).
There are many subsidiary tombs of nobles and ranking
officials in the area surrounding Qianling, which has
a circumference of forty kilometers. One of the eighteen
imperial tombs of the Tang Dynasty in the Guanzhong area,
Qianling was never excavated or vandalized; because it
is intact, it is of particularly great historical value.
In
front of Qianling stands a large group of stone statues
that were carved on the order of Empress Wu Zetian to
commemorate the funeral of Emperor Gao Zong. Sixty-one
of the figures represent foreign envoys who attended the
funeral. Dressed in their national costumes, these life-size
statues stand on either side of the passage to the tomb,
hands cupped to the chest in a gesture of prayer. This
seems to indicate that close relations existed at that
time between China and various other regions.
Near
Qianling are the tombs of Princes s Yongtai and Prince
Zhanghuai. Murals of great artistic value have been found
here in excavated underground chambers.
Banpo
Village
The
remains of this primitive settlement, consisting of a
dwelling area, pottery center, and graveyard, were discovered
in 1953 about six kilometers east of Xi'an. Archaeologists
believe that this settlement was a Neolithic maternal
clan community. Many ancient objects have been unearthed
here, including household utensils, pottery, and tools
made of stone or animal bones. Some of the objects are
decorated with zoomorphic or geometric designs. The discovery
of this settlement is of great importance to the study
of primitive Chinese society. The site became a museum
in 1958.
Mount
Huashan
Located
south of Huayin County, 120 kilometers east of Xi'an,
Mount Huashan is one of the five sacred mountains of China.
Its sheer cliffs and precipices make the climb a perilous
adventure. The mountain has five peaks, of which the tallest
is Wild Goose Alighting Peak (Luoyanfeng) (2,200 meters).
The top of this peak commands a view of the vast expanse
of the Guanzhong Plain to the north, where the Yellow
River (Huanghe) winds like a dragon, and of the rolling
Qinling mountain range to the southwest. The East Peak,
also called Morning Sun (Zhaoyang) Peak, offers a magnificent
view of the sunrise. Mount Huashan is also known for its
Taoist monasteries; one of these is West Mountain Temple
(xiyuemiao), located north of Huayin County Town. Other
places of historical interest include Jade Fountain Garden
(Yuquanyuan) and Female Immortal Temple (Xianguguan).
Lishan
Scenic Area
This
beautiful area is located in Lintong County, twenty-five
kilometers northeast of Xi'an. There are hot springs at
Lishan, and a royal park was built here during the Zhou
Dynasty some three thousand years ago.
Huaqing
Pool resort at the foot of Lishan Hill where Emperor Xuan
Zong (685-762) of the Tang Dynasty used to spend the winter
with his favorite concubine, Lady Yang. They bathed at
Gui Fei Pool.
East
of Huaqing Pool is the hillside pavilion where Chiang
Kaishek was captured on December 12, 1936, in the famous
Xi'an Incident - an uprising launched by generals Zhang
Xueliang and Yang Hucheng. Chinese was forced to agree
to end the civil war and join the national united front
against the Japanese invaders.
East
of Old Mother Hall (Laojundian) are the remains of Longevity
Hall (Changshengdian). According to legend, it was here
that Emperor Xuan Zong and Lady Yang vowed to live together
forever as "lovebirds in the sky and twin lotus flowers
on a stalk."
The
remains of beacon towers can be seen on Xixiuling Peak.
They were built for defense more than three thousand years
ago. The peak also affords a view of the tomb of Emperor
Qin Shi Huang (259-210 B.C.)
Huaqing
Hot Springs
Situated
at the northern foot of Mt. Lishan in Lintong County,
30 kilometers (18.6 miles) from Xian City, Huaqing Hot
Spring is famed for both its dainty spring scenery and
the romantic love story of Emperor Xuanzong (685-762)
and his concubine Yang Guifei in the Tang Dynasty (618-907).
Its long history and location among the wonderful landscapes
of Xian should entice any visitor to visit and bathe in
this hot spring. |