Hoi Tong Monastery

The Hoi Tong Monastery,[1] also known by many other names, is a Buddhist temple and monastery on Henan Island in Guangzhou, China. It shares its grounds with the city's Haichuang Park.

Hoi Tong Monastery
The iron Thousand Buddha Tower in the monastery's courtyard
Site
LocationGuangzhou, China
Coordinates23°6′28″N 113°15′13″E
Hoi Tong Monastery
The temple's main gate
Chinese
Literal meaningSea-Banner Temple
Qianqiu Temple
Chinese
Literal meaningThousand-Autumn Temple
Haichuang Park
Traditional Chinese公園
Simplified Chinese公园
Literal meaningSea Banner Public Park
Henan Park
Traditional Chinese河南公園
Simplified Chinese河南公园
Literal meaningSouth of the River Public Park
The temple's Main Hall

Names

The official English form of the name is "Hoi Tong Monastery",[1] a transcription of the Cantonese pronunciation of the Chinese translation of the Indian Buddhist monk Sāgaradhvaja[2][3][4] (Sanskrit: सागरध्वज, lit "Ocean[5] Banner"[6] or "Flagpole"),[7] who appears in the Flower Garland Sutra as a devout student of the Heart Sutra.[1] Variants include Hoi Tong Temple;[8] the translations Ocean Banner Temple[9] or Monastery,[10][11] Sea Banner Temple,[12] and Sea Screen[13][14] or Sea-screen Temple;[15] the Mandarin Hae Chwang,[16] Haichuang,[17] and Hai-chuang Temple;[9] and the misreadings "Hoy Hong Temple"[18] and "Haizhuang Temple".[19]

From its location, it has also been known as the Temple of Honan[20] or Honam.[13][14]

History

Portrait of the Jin Bao

The monastery was first established as the Qianqiu Temple under the Southern Han,[1] a 10th-century Tang successor state whose capital was at Xingwang (now Guangzhou). The walled city lay north of the Pearl River, while Henan Island and the monastery lay to its south. By the end of the Ming, the temple operated within the private garden of Guo Longyue ().[10] He was responsible for renaming it after the Buddhist monk Sāgaradhvaja.[1]

The monastery, surrounded by majestic banyan trees,[20] flourished under the early Qing. Jin Bao (), a former minister of the Yongli Emperor, retired here. During the reign of the Kangxi Emperor, it was expanded continuously by the monks Azi (), Chee Yut,[10] and others,[1] sometimes prompting English sources to place its establishment in 1662.[10] Around a hundred monks lived at the monastery; the treatment of the wealthy and poor members was very unequal.[21] It was the principal temple for Henan (then known as "Ho-nan")[22] and sometimes even acclaimed the most famous of southern China's Buddhist temples.[20][23]

The temple complex was particularly important to foreign visitors as it was one of the few locations in Guangzhou ("Canton") open to them before the First Opium War. The main hall's large buddhas were removed to other temples[24][21] so that Lord Amherst and his retinue could rest there for three weeks 1–20 January 1817[25] before returning home via Macao following their failed embassy to Beijing ("Pekin"). The French artist Auguste Borget visited the temple repeatedly during his world tour, stating "The noise outside the temple was so great and the silence inside the temple was so solemn, that I believed myself transported to another world".[15] The temple faced the row of factories on Guangzhou's waterfront. Regulations issued in 1831 restricted foreign access to its grounds to the 8th, 18th, and 28th days of the lunar months.[9] Prior to the advent of photography, paintings of the grounds at Hoi Tong made up one of the fifteen classes of Qing export paintings.[26][n 1]

At the time, the river entrance was the most used, leading to a courtyard guarded by a pair of wooden statues. Beyond, there were flagged walks amid banyan trees, leading to colonnades filled with numerous idols "of every sect and profession". At the far end were three halls, the center of which held three 11-foot (3.4 m) idols of the Buddhas past, present, and yet-to-come—"Kwo-keu-fuh", "Heen-tsa-fuh", and "We-lae-fuh"—in a seated position. On each side were 18 early disciples of the Buddha, considered at the time to have been the precursors to the Qing emperors.[27] Illustrations were made of the trial and punishment of sinners in the afterlife, but none of the Buddhist paradises.[23] The side walls were covered with silk embroidered in gold and silver thread with passages of scripture, and the whole lit with several hundred lanterns suspended from the roof's crossbeams.[21] The garden included rare plants and penjing, miniature trees grown into the shape of boats and birdcages.[13] On the grounds, pigs and other animals[28] were kept as an "illustration of the Buddhist tenet not to destroy but to care for animal life".[29] The pigs became famous, some being so enormously fat that they were nearly unable to walk.[29] Some of the sties were located with the temples and, upon their deaths, they were accorded funereal rites and laid within a special mausoleum on the grounds.[21] Its library was well stocked. The monastery ran its own printing press,[13][14] as well as a crematorium and mausoleum for the monks.[29][28] This dagoba was considered "magnificent", if not on the level of Beijing's Baita.[30] The abbot's cell included a separate reception room and a small chapel with a shrine to Buddha.[13][14] The entire grounds spread over about 7 acres (2.8 ha).[16]

The monastery was also a site for instruction in kung fu.[31] The master Liang Kun (Leung Kwan) died while training in the 36-Point Copper Ring Pole technique under the monk Yuanguang in 1887.[32] In the 1920s, it housed Guangzhou's Chin Woo Athletic Association.[33]

The great trees of the monastery were ruined during the Taiping Rebellion.[29] The monastery faded from importance in foreign guidebooks after the Opium Wars opened Guangzhou proper to visitors,[34] although the principal factories were removed to Henan during the years 1856–1859 after a devastating fire along the north bank and the number of monks grew as high as 175.[16] During the reign of the Empress Dowager Cixi, the area around the monastery became more residential and it began to fade.[1] As part of the educational reforms surrounding the end of the imperial examination system, the monastery was obliged to make room for the Nanwu Public School (南武公学).[35] It was severely damaged during the early years of the Republic,[1] although it was protected for a time by local elites.[36] The entire compound aside from two halls was demolished and in 1928 its land was confiscated and opened as Henan Park.[1] Its scriptures were removed to a public library.[37] An official embassy of the city's Buddhists to the capital at Nanjing the next year was a failure, but the park was permitted to keep some of its idols as statues "for public appreciation". Praying and burning incense in the park were outlawed, but locals continued to tie paper offerings to the Buddhas and several women came at night to pray. Their murmuring was sometimes mistaken by other visitors as the sounds of ghosts haunting the grounds.[38] In September 1933, the area was renamed "Haichuang Park". The surviving buildings of the complex were severely damaged again during the Cultural Revolution of the late 1960s and early '70s.[1]

Following China's opening up, the Guangzhou Municipal People's Government permitted the monastery to resume official operation in 1993, identifying it as a heritage conservation unit. The grounds of the monastery were repaired and renovated but continue to only occupy the western half of the former site, the rest making up Guangzhou's Haichuang Park. This was restored to the temple by the Haizhu District People's Government on 1 July 2006[1] but remains open to the public.

Abbots

The present abbot is Master Xincheng ().[19]

See also

Notes

  1. The other fourteen were the city and port of Guangzhou, its markets and street vendors, its government offices and paraphrenalia, its riverine and maritime traffic, Chinese clothing, the workshops of Foshan, Chinese punishments, Chinese gardens and mansions, its religious architecture and rituals, opium addicts, Chinese interior decorating including its plants and birds, Chinese opera, Beijing life and customs, and its shop signs.[26]

References

Citations

  1. Official site (2016).
  2. Ding Fubao [丁福保] (1922), 佛学大辞典, 53智识. (in Chinese)
  3. Osto, Douglas (2008), Power, Wealth, and Women in Indian Mahāyāna Buddhism: The Gaṇḍavyūha-sūtra, Abingdon: Routledge, p. 136.
  4. "Sanskrit Personal Names Index", Digital Dictionary of Buddhism, 2015.
  5. "sāgara सागर", Sanskrit Dictionary.
  6. "dhvaja ध्वज", Sanskrit Dictionary.
  7. "dhvaja ध्वज", Sanskrit Dictionary.
  8. The China Journal, vol. 30, 1939, p. 141.
  9. Garrett (2002), p. 113.
  10. Gray (1875), p. 34.
  11. Garrett (2002), p. 114.
  12. Neumann, Karl Friedrich (1831), "The Laws of the Shamans", The Catechism of the Shamans; or, the Laws and Regulations of the Priesthood of Buddha in China, London: Oriental Translation Fund, p. 37.
  13. Thomson (1874), "Honam Temple, Canton".
  14. Hunter (1885), p. 176.
  15. "The Sea-screen Temple at Honam, Canton", Hong Kong Museum of Art, Google Arts & Culture.
  16. The People's Cyclopedia of Universal Knowledge, vol. I, Phillips & Hunt, 1883, "Canton", p. 364.
  17. Tarocco, Francesca (2007), The Cultural Practices of Modern Chinese Buddhism: Attuning the Dharma, London: Routledge, p. 48, ISBN 9781136754395.
  18. "Birth Place", Fu-Jow Pai Federation, 2011.
  19. Jiang Wu (7 August 2015), "Haizhuang Temple in Guangzhou", Leaving for the Rising Sun.
  20. Wright (1843), p. 10.
  21. Wright (1843), p. 11.
  22. Ellis (1817), pp. 407.
  23. Wright (1843), p. 66.
  24. Ellis (1817), pp. 420.
  25. Ellis (1817), pp. 407–21.
  26. Kit, Eva Wah Man (17 August 2015), "Influence of Global Aesthetics on Chinese Aesthetics: The Adaption of Moxie and the Case of Dafen Cun", Issues of Contemporary Art and Aesthetics in Chinese Context, Chinese Contemporary Art Series, Heidelberg: Springer, pp. 97–8, ISBN 978-3-662-46509-7.
  27. Wright (1843), p. 10–11.
  28. Seward (1873), p. 240–1.
  29. Hunter (1885), p. 177.
  30. Gray, John Henry (1878), China: A History of the Laws, Manners, and Customs of the People, vol. I, London: Macmillan & Co., p. 123, ISBN 9780486160733.
  31. Lam Sai Wing (2002), Iron Thread, Southern Shaolin Hung Gar Kung Fu, Lulu Press, p. 30, ISBN 9781847991928.
  32. "The Famous Masters of Hung Gar", European Hung Gar Association, 2001, archived from the original on 2006-05-07, retrieved 2017-08-29{{citation}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link).
  33. Kennedy, Brian; et al. (15 June 2010), Jingwu: The School that Transformed Kung Fu, Berkeley: Blue Snake Books, p. 140, ISBN 978-1-58394-242-0.
  34. Garrett (2002), p. 123.
  35. Poon (2011), p. 25.
  36. Poon (2011), p. 55.
  37. Poon (2011), p. 127.
  38. Poon (2011), p. 75.
  39. Wood, Dick (23 December 1903), "Come with Me to China", The Tacoma Times, p. 2.

Bibliography

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