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Chaoqi (Chinese: 炒琪/炒祺) is a traditional Chinese snack. It is made with pieces of dough covered with Guanyin clay, a kind of clay soil. The primary materials for making Chaoqi are flour, edible oil, egg, sugar, and salt. It is often flavored with milk, sesame, and five-spice powder. [1]
The Mount Guanyin (simplified Chinese: 观音山; traditional Chinese: 觀音山; pinyin: Guānyīnshān) also known as the National Forest Park of Mount Guanyin (simplified Chinese: 观音山国家森林公园; traditional Chinese: 觀音山國家森林公園; pinyin: Guānyīnshān Guójiā Sēnlín Gōngyuán), is a 488-metre (1,601 ft) mountain on the border of Dongguan and Shenzhen in ...
Tieguanyin (simplified Chinese: 铁 观 音; traditional Chinese: 鐵觀音; pinyin: tiěguānyīn; Cantonese Yale: titgūnyām; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Thih-koan-im; lit. 'Iron Goddess of Mercy '; Standard Chinese pronunciation [tʰjè.kwán.ín] ) is a variety of Chinese oolong tea that originated in the 19th century in Anxi in Fujian province .
Mount Putuo (Chinese: 普陀山; pinyin: Pǔtuó Shān, from Sanskrit: "Mount Potalaka") is an island in Putuo District, Zhoushan, Zhejiang, China. It is a renowned site in Chinese Buddhism and is the bodhimaṇḍa of the bodhisattva Guanyin. Mount Putuo is one of the four sacred mountains in Chinese Buddhism, the others being Mount Wutai ...
The Guanyin of Mount Xiqiao is a colossal statue of Guanyin, on Mount Xiqiao, in Nanhai District of Foshan, Guangdong, China. This monument stands 62 m (203 ft) tall, [ 1 ] [ 2 ] and sits on a 15 m pedestal making a total height of 77 m (253 ft).
A new cultivar of Mount Wuyi Oolong which can be either tightly rolled or in strips Huangguanyin is grown in Fujian province , China. Huang Guanyin tea ( simplified Chinese : 黄 观音 茶 ; traditional Chinese : 黄觀音茶 ; pinyin : Huáng Guānyīn chá ; pronounced [kwán.ín ʈʂʰǎ] ) is a Wuyi oolong with a creamy taste.
When the scenic area was first established on October 17, 2002, it covered a total area of 123.51 km 2 (47.69 sq mi) and was mainly composed of the north coast of Taiwan, Yehliu and Mount Guanyin. It encompasses two separate sections of New Taipei City .
The temple was originally built in the Kangxi era (1662–1722) of the Qing dynasty (1644–1911). [2]Legend said that the 6th Dalai Lama once settled at the temple. [2]The temple has been added to the list of National Key Buddhist Temples in Han Chinese Area by the State Council of China.