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Seven foundation figurines from the Ibgal temple, which dedicated to Inanna, [6] are assumed to be depictions of Shul-utul. [7] He was also worshiped in Emah (Sumerian: "exalted house" [8]), a shrine of Nanshe located in Girsu. [9] The only certain attestation of Shul-utul from the Ur III period is the personal name Ur-Shul-utul. [7]
The Arhat Garden in the temple The Main Shrine of the temple, set up as a temporary memorial hall following the death of founder Hsing Yun in 2023. The Bodhisattva Hall (五聖殿): The first shrine before entering the temple. It is a large hall that honors five Bodhisattvas: Samantabhadra, Ksitigarbha, Maitreya, Avalokitesvara, and Manjusri.
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The Sixteen Prefectures (yellow) wedged between Liao (gray) in the north and Northern Song (light gray) in the south. Some distance to its west is Western Xia (deep gray). The Sixteen Prefectures, more precisely known as the Sixteen Prefectures of Yan-Yun (traditional Chinese: 燕雲十六州; simplified Chinese: 燕云十六州; pinyin: Yānyún Shíliù Zhōu) or the Sixteen Prefectures of ...
The Great Compassion Shrine (Chinese: 大悲殿; pinyin: Dàbēi diàn) has an area of 800 square meters, is 6 meters high, and contains a 6-meter-high statue of Guan Yin. The Patriarch Shrine ( Chinese : 宗祖殿 ; pinyin : Zōngzǔ diàn ) serves as a memorial hall for Hsing Yun and houses his archive of his written works, and is the final ...
Map of the West Lake in Hangzhou, China, with the location of Lingyin Temple Buddhist monks chanting at Lingyin Temple, Hangzhou, October 2010.. Lingyin Temple (simplified Chinese: 灵隐寺; traditional Chinese: 靈隱寺; pinyin: Língyǐn Sì) is a prominent Chan Buddhist temple near Hangzhou that is renowned for its many pagodas and grottos. [1]
Wong Tai Sin Temple (Chinese: 黃大仙祠) is a well known shrine and tourist attraction in Hong Kong. [1] It is dedicated to Wong Tai Sin, or the Great Immortal Wong. [2] The 18,000 m 2 (190,000 sq ft) Taoist temple is famed for the many prayers answered: "What you request is what you get" (有求必應) via a practice called kau chim.
Hsu Yun Temple (also Xuyun; 虛雲禪寺 (traditional Chinese); 虚云禅寺 (simplified Chinese); is a temple of the Xuyun branch of the Linji school of Chán Buddhism in Honolulu, Hawaii. Jy Ding standing in front of Hsu Yun Temple.