Mount Wutai
With its five flat peaks, Mount Wutai is a sacred Buddhist
mountain. The cultural landscape is home to forty-one monasteries and
includes the East Main Hall of Foguang Temple, the highest surviving
timber building of the Tang dynasty, with life-size clay sculptures. It
also features the Ming dynasty Shuxiang Temple with a huge complex of
500 statues representing Buddhist stories woven into three-dimensional
pictures of mountains and water. Overall, the buildings on the site
catalogue the way in which Buddhist architecture developed and
influenced palace building in China for over a millennium. Mount Wutai,
literally, 'the five terrace mountain', is the highest in Northern China
and is remarkable for its morphology of precipitous slopes with five
open treeless peaks. Temples have been built on this site from the 1st
century AD to the early 20th century.