Introduction to Zen Master Yiwei'an's Pagoda: Zen Master Yiwei'an's Pagoda is commonly known as "big bell covered with small bell" and "tower within a tower". It is shaped like a yurt. This pagoda was built in the 55th year of Emperor Kangxi's reign in the Qing Dynasty (1686). It was built for the death of Yi Wei'an, the second generation founder of Huangbo Temple in the late Ming and early Qing dynasties. Its shape is still the only example in the country and is known as the masterpiece of Chinese stone architectural art. Treasure. The outer tower is built with stones to form an arc-shaped bell-shaped tower house. The height of the tower house is 4.3 meters and the bottom diameter is 4.5 meters. There is a tower gate in the south, a three-story tower, a base, a phase wheel, and a pearl. There is another bell-shaped tower inside the tower, which is also shaped like a bell. The inner tower is 2.47 meters high and 1.2 meters wide at the bottom. The front of the tower is engraved with "Yiwei'an Zen Master Pagoda". The temple is composed of three layers of Fubo, Yanglian and Baozhu. Between the inner and outer towers, dozens of people can be accommodated.
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