S2023-209b
광주문화예술인문스토리플랫폼
Understanding Buddhist Art through Gwangju’s Masterpieces 》The Landscape of a Korean Buddhist Temple as Seen in Jeungsimsa Temple
Story
- Within Jeungsimsa Temple on Mudeungsan Mountain, a variety of Buddhist cultural heritage can be seen. Founded by Master Cheolgam (798-868) in the mid-9th century, the temple is home to several designated cultural heritages, such as its three-story stone pagoda, Obaekjeon Hall, its iron seated Vairocana Buddha, and its stone standing bodhisattva statue.
- Several of these heritages were brought to this temple after the temples where they were originally enshrined shut down, showing how Buddhist art could move from temple to temple.
- Jeungsimsa Temple is also neighbored by other temples on Mudeungsan Mountain, such as Wonhyosa and Yaksaam, which show the "mountain monastery" communities.
- In this way, Jeungsimsa captures the nature of Korean Buddhist temples.
Semantic Data
Node Description
id | class | groupName | partName | label | hangeul | hanja | english | infoUrl | iconUrl |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
S2023-209b | Story | Episode | The Landscape of a Korean Buddhist Temple as Seen in Jeungsimsa Temple | The Landscape of a Korean Buddhist Temple as Seen in Jeungsimsa Temple | http://dh.aks.ac.kr/~gwangju/wiki/index.php/S2023-209b | http://dh.aks.ac.kr/~gwangju/icon/episode.png |
Notes
Story Network Graph