Cultural Relics Lost to Quake in China
BEIJING, May 23 -- Sixty-five cultural relics
under state protection and 119 under provincial
protection in Sichuan province have been severely
damaged as a result of last Monday's earthquake,
the State Administration of Cultural Heritage
said this week.
Expert teams will be sent to Sichuan to appraise
the damage and advise on the best course of
action, the administration's director Shan Jixiang
said.
Shan arrived on Monday in Chengdu, the provincial
capital, where he chaired a disaster relief
conference the following day.
The conference heard that many ancient buildings
in Sichuan have collapsed or are on the brink
of collapse. A total of 841 museum relics, 148
of which were regarded as precious, have been
ruined.
The Erwang Temple and Mount Qingcheng in Dujiangyan,
and the Bao'en Temple in Pingwu county were
among the worst hit.
The Erwang Temple, which translates as "Temple
of Two Kings", was built 2,000 years ago
to honor Li Bing, the then governor of Sichuan
governor, and his son for their contribution
to the construction of Dujiangyan, the world's
oldest irrigation project still in operation.
It collapsed in the quake.
At Mount Qingcheng, the birthplace of Taoism,
China's only indigenous religion, several ancient
buildings are listing and in danger of collapsing,
Wang Qiong, deputy chief of the Sichuan bureau
of cultural heritage, said.
Like the Dujiangyan irrigation project, which
was built around 256 BC, Mount Qingcheng is
on the United Nations' World Heritage List.
The Bao'en Temple, built by Pingwu governor
Wang Xi between 1,440 and 1,460, is one of the
largest Buddhist temples in Sichuan, measuring
278 m by 100 m.
The monastic complex was known for its glazed
roof tiles, similar to those found at the Imperial
City in Beijing.
To show his gratitude to the emperor for allowing
him to build such a large temple, Wang Xi named
it "Bao'en", which means, "paying
a debt of gratitude".
Wang Qiong said many of the temple's walls
have collapsed and its fresco has been ruined.
Despite Chengdu being 92 km from the epicenter,
the roofs of some buildings at the city's Du
Fu Thatched Cottage Museum were broken and some
walls have cracked.
The museum is dedicated to Du Fu, one of China's
greatest poets, who wrote 240 poems while living
in Chengdu.
Sichuan's cultural bureau has asked museums
across the province to temporarily store their
exhibits to ensure their safety, Wang Qiong
said.
Source: China Daily
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