Mahāvīra Treasure Hall
大雄寶殿
大雄宝殿
Dàxióngbǎodiàn
Ta-hsiung-pao-tien
Baoguosi Daxiongbaodian
保國寺大雄寶殿
保国寺大雄宝殿
Daxiongbaodian
Mahāvīra Treasure Hall
大雄寶殿
大雄宝殿
Dàxióngbǎodiàn
Ta-hsiung-pao-tien
Baoguosi Daxiongbaodian
保國寺大雄寶殿
保国寺大雄宝殿
Daxiongbaodian
29.983
121.516833
1013
Northern Song 960 - 1127
29˚ 58.98' N 121˚ 31.01' E (Magellan)
palatial hall
dian
殿
殿
The Mahavira Treasure Hall (Daxiongbaodian 大雄寶殿) is a building in a Buddhist Monastery that is dedicated to the worship of Sakyamuni Buddha. The Mahavira Treasure Hall at Baoguo Monastery was first built in 1013 during the Northern Song Dynasty and was originally three bays in width and depth with a single eaves hip-gable roof ( shaliangtou 厦兩頭 ) (Guo 2003, 77). During a renovation in the Qing Dynasty , two rows of pillars were added to the front, left, and right of the building to create a double-eaves hall, expanding the building to five bays (seven if the exterior wall is included) in width and six bays in depth. Only one layer of eaves was added to the back because of the site’s sloping topography (Guo 2003, 33-39; Yang 1987, 46). The roof of the building is supported by an eight-rafter beam structure . The transverse roof frame extends eight rafters using a three-rafter beam in the front bay, a three-rafter beam in the central bay, and a rufu tie beam (乳栿) spanning two rafters in the back (中国文物局 2010, 117). These are all supported using four pillars from front to back. All sixteen of the pillars supporting the original Mahavira Treasure Hall are lobed and tapered composite pillars (" guasuozhu 瓜梭柱 "), with six different variations. This is significant in Chinese architectural history because Baoguo Monastery Mahavira Treasure Hall’s pillars are the earliest remaining timber examples of this technique. Similar pillars are seen in stone buildings from the Song Dynasty (Guo 2003, 86). Another important artifact of the Mahavira Treasure Hall is the painting on the lan'e (闌額) . The painting follows the “seven red eight white” (qizhu babai 七朱八白)method described in the Yingzao fashi (營造法式 1103; Li 2009, 14.10a).
Date 1013
1013-01-01
1013-01-01
Dynasty Northern Song 960 - 1127
0960-01-01
1127-01-01
Mahāvīra Treasure Hall
大雄寶殿
大雄宝殿
Dàxióngbǎodiàn
Ta-hsiung-pao-tien
Baoguosi Daxiongbaodian
保國寺大雄寶殿
保国寺大雄宝殿
Daxiongbaodian
text/html
(eds.), "Baoguo Monastery, Mahāvīra Treasure Hall 保國寺大雄寶殿 " in Architectura Sinica last modified March 21, 2018, https://architecturasinica.org/place/000132
Mahāvīra Treasure Hall
大雄寶殿
大雄宝殿
Dàxióngbǎodiàn
Ta-hsiung-pao-tien
Baoguosi Daxiongbaodian
保國寺大雄寶殿
保国寺大雄宝殿
Daxiongbaodian
text/xml
(eds.), "Baoguo Monastery, Mahāvīra Treasure Hall 保國寺大雄寶殿 " in Architectura Sinica last modified March 21, 2018, https://architecturasinica.org/place/000132
Mahāvīra Treasure Hall
大雄寶殿
大雄宝殿
Dàxióngbǎodiàn
Ta-hsiung-pao-tien
Baoguosi Daxiongbaodian
保國寺大雄寶殿
保国寺大雄宝殿
Daxiongbaodian
text/turtle
(eds.), "Baoguo Monastery, Mahāvīra Treasure Hall 保國寺大雄寶殿 " in Architectura Sinica last modified March 21, 2018, https://architecturasinica.org/place/000132
Mahāvīra Treasure Hall
大雄寶殿
大雄宝殿
Dàxióngbǎodiàn
Ta-hsiung-pao-tien
Baoguosi Daxiongbaodian
保國寺大雄寶殿
保国寺大雄宝殿
Daxiongbaodian
text/xml
(eds.), "Baoguo Monastery, Mahāvīra Treasure Hall 保國寺大雄寶殿 " in Architectura Sinica last modified March 21, 2018, https://architecturasinica.org/place/000132