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The Big Wild Goose Pagoda was built for the safekeeping
of the scriptures and Buddha's statues brought back by the famous monk
Xuanzang of the Tang Dynasty from india. It was built in the Great Ci'en
Monastery of the Tang Dynasty in 652 A.D. Composing of 7 storeys 64 meters
in height, it is of high architectural art. Above the stone doors at the
bottom of the tower, there remain the exquisite line-etched pictures from
the Tang Dynasty. The bottom of the pagoda resembles a wild goose, hence
the name, the Big Wild Goose Pagoda. This pagoda is the symbol of Xi'an.
Xuanzang
was a famous monk in the Tang Dynasty. He was known as Monk Tang after his conversion.
He was a prominent Buddhist, traveler, translator and one of the founders of Wei-shih
School. Disturbed by the division of Buddhism at home, he traveled alone in 627A.D.
from Chang'an (Xi'an) to india to study Buddhism. After 17 years of untold hardships
and a journey of 50,000 kilometers, he returned from india with piles of Buddhist
scriptures. He subsequently spent 12 years at the Great Ci'en Monastery translating
the scriptures. Xuanzang is a household name in
China. The famous novel A Journey to the West is based on his true story. | |