Located to the south of Grand Zongjing Monastery
宗镜大昭之庙 in Xiangshan (Fragrant Hill) Park, the Glazed Pagoda 琉璃塔 was originally
part of the monastery. Although the monastery suffered great damage at the hands
of the allied forces of the eight powers in 1900, the pagoda survived.
Zongjing Monastery was built in 1780 especially for
the accommodation of the Sixth Bainqen when he went from Tibet to Beijing to
celebrate the seventieth birthday of Emperor Qianlong. The octagonal pagoda,
forty meters high, has seven storeys. At the bottom is a square platform and an
octagonal base to support the main structure. In the middle of the stone base,
surrounded by white marble balustrades, is a pavilion-style structure, the pent
roof of which is supported by wooden columns. A flat octagonal pedestal, also
made of stone, decorated with statues of Buddha and surrounded by white marble
balustrades, sits in the middle of the extending pent roof. The solid pagoda on
the pedestal is composed of yellow, green, purple, blue and other colorful
glazed parts, such as the pillars, arched doors, brackets, beams and ridge
tiles. The steeple is decorated with a huge precious bead on top. This kind of pagoda with verandas and terraces
attached to it was built after the style of Chinese traditional halls and
chambers. During the Tang and Song dynasties verandas and terraces were expanded
as resting places in a building. This style was adopted in the construction of
solid pagodas so that pilgrims could take a rest on them. Further innovations
were made when pagoda builders put the pedestal on the pent roof of the lower
structure and added balustrades to it.
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