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The
Potala Palace
The Potala Palace, which stands 117 meters
high atop the Red Hill in Lhasa, was built 1,300-odd
years ago in the 7th century. The 13-story palace,
the world's highest, is more than 3,700 meters
above sea level and is a rare example of traditional
Tibetan architecture.
The
Potala Palace covers an area of 360,000 square
meters, and measures 360 meters east-west and
270 meters north-south. It features a combination
of stone-and-wood Tibetan watchtowers and Han
Chinese palace halls with traditional beams
and pillars, golden roofs and sunk panels. Courtyards
and winding corridors were arranged to suit
the location. While the major part of the palace
complex is highlighted, subordinate architectural
groups form a jagged, interlocking pattern providing
more space than one would expect, an achievement
recognized in the history of architedure.
Legend
has it that the Tubo King Songtsan Gambo, a
devout Buddhist, often went to recite Buddhist
scriptures and pray by what he later named Potala
Hill when he made the city of Lhasa his capital.
Potala is the Sanskrit pronunciation of Buddha's
Mountain. In the Tibetan language, Potala means
residence of the Goddess of Mercy. In 614 when
he married the Tang Dynasty (618-907) Princess
Wencheng, he had the Potala Palace built for
his wife. The Potala Palace he built had nine
storys, with 999 palace chambers and 1,000 halls
specially built for Buddhist meditation in the
hill. In the ensuing years, the Potala Palace
suffered from wars, thunderbolts and fire. Only
the Cave for the Prince of Dharma and the Main
Hall, the Pagbalhakang, survived these devastating
changes. The present Potala Palace was rebuilt
after the 17th century.
The
main architecture of the Potala Palace is composed
of the two parts: Places used by the Dalai Lama
as his living chambers and for political activities;
and holy stupas of the successive generations
of Dalai Lamas and various Buddhist halls.
The
first part is concentrated in the White Palace,
built in 1645-1653. This part fans out from
the original Hall of the Goddess of Mercy towards
the east and west, encompassing groups of monastic
halls with white walls-hence the name the White
Palace. The White Palace has seven storys. The
fourth story, the Coqenxag or the Eastern Hall,
covers and area of 717 square meters and is
propped up by 38 large pillars. This is the
most important Buddhist hall in the Potala Palace,
and has witnessed many major religious and political
activities, including the enthronement ceremony
for the reincarnated soul boy of the Dalai Lama
and the ceremony held when the Dalai Lama begins
his reign at the age of 18. The fifth and sixth
storys were used as th offices and living chambers
of the Prince Regent. The seventh story was
the Winter Palace of the Dalai Lama. It is called
the Sunlight Hall simply because the hall enjoys
boundless sunlight through its spacious windows.
The hall is furnished with gold basins, jade
bowls and other treasures, accentuating the
high position of the occupant. Outside the Sunlight
Hall is a spacious balcony offering a bird's-eye
view of the whole of Lhasa. In the distance
are undulating mountain ranges, the beautiful
Lhasa River, tracts of fields, tree-shaded villages
and the glistening Jokhang Monastery.
The
second part is concentrated in the Red Palace.
When the Red Palace was built in 1690, the Qing
Dynasty Emperor Kangxi sent some 100 artisans
of the Han, Manchu and Mongolian nationalities
to take part in the construction. The majority
of the Red Palace is taken up with various Buddhist
halls and eight holy stupas containing the remains
of the Dalai Lamas. The holy stupa for the 5th
Dalai Lama is wrapped inside 110,000 taels of
gold sheet and inlaid with 18,677 pearls and
pieces of gems, coral, amber and agate. Sixipuncog,
or the Western hall, is the largest hall in
the Red Palace. The hall covers 725 square meters,
and holds a plaque bearing an inscription by
Emperor Qianlong of the Qing Dynasty. Inside
the hall is the holy throne of the Dalai Lama
and a pair of colored silk curtains granted
by Emperor Kangxi of the Qing Dynasty. The Three-World
Hall, which is the highest in the Red Palace,
holds the Beijing-edition Dangyur which Emperor
Yongzhen of the Qing Dynasty presented to the
7th Lalai Lama. The westernmost section of the
Red Palace is the Hall of the Holy Stupa for
the 13th Dalai Lama. The hall, 14 meters high,
contains a Mandala said to be made of 200,000
pearls. The Potala Palace is a treasure house
of Tibetan art, the opulence of which reflects
the enormous differences that existed between
the nobles and the serfs and slaves, who made
up 95 percent of the Tibetan population, in
the old days. While the Red Palace is composed
of the religious center and the Holy Stupa Memorial
Hall, the White Palace features the living chambers
and political center of the Dalai Lama. Both
palaces indicate the social character of temporal
and religious activities in old Tibet. The 5th
Dalai Lama moved into the White Palace from
the Zhaibung Monastery as soon as the former
was built. He stayed there until his death.
The Dalai Lamas of later generations resided
in the Potala Palace, from where they exercised
political power. This is why lamas and Tibetan
Buddhists worship the Potala Palace and consider
it as holy land.
For
more than 300 years, the Potala Palace was the
center from which Tibet's political and religious
administration was run. It is now a museum of
historical relics and arts and crafts, including
50,000 square meters of frescos featuring lifelike
figures, which tell religious stories, display
local customs and habits, and often contain
biographies of historical and religious figures,
and records of historical events. The frescos
record the expansion of the Potala Palace in
history and Princess Wencheng's entry into Tibet
in the 7th century. In the Western Hall, there
is a wall of frescos which display the 5th Dalai
Lama paying homage to the Qing Emperor Shunzhi
in 1652. In the Hall for the Holy Stupa of the
13th Dalai Lama is a fresco recording the 13th
Dalai Lama paying homage to Qing Emperor Guangxu
and Empress Dowager Ci Xi in Beijing. The palace
also boasts a huge collection of cultural relics
and Buddhist classics, such as close to 1,000
Buddhist pagodas, about 10,000 statues of Buddha,
numerous tangka paintings, pattra-leaf Sutra
and Gangyur, as well as gold certificates of
appointment, and gold and jade seals of authority,
which emperors of the Ming and Qing dynasties
bestowed to the Dalai Lamas of various generations.
These historical and cultural relics are witness
to the fact that China is a country with many
nationalities, including the Tibetan. Rich collections
of woolen rugs, canopy, religious objects, curtains,
silk fabrics, gold and silver utensils, chinaware
and ston artifacts often provoke wonder and
amazement in visitors.
The
Central Government of the People's Republic
of China pays great attention to the protection
of the Potala Palace. In 1961, the State Council
made the Potala Palace one of the major cultural
relics subject to state protection, and earmarked
a huge amount of funding for its repair. The
Potala Palace, however, failed to experience
a thorough repair in the 300-odd years after
its reconstruction. Many hidden dangers existed.
The State Council decided in 1985 to repair
it on a large scale. This marked the largest
repair project undertaken since the founding
of the People's Republic of China in 1949.
October
11, 1989 was a fine day, Religious horns were
blown in the Potala Palace. Gyaincain Qoinjor,
a young lama from the Sera Monastery, broke
the ground to begin the repair of the Potala
Palace. The young lama was selected to do the
historic work through the traditional method
of divination. The handsome lama's parents were
still alive, and he was born in an auspicious
year. The repair of the Potala Palace proceeded
strictly in accordance with the traditions of
the Tibetan race and the rituals of Tibetan
Buddhism. The project was successfully completed
in September 1994 at a cost of 53 million yuan.
The repaired Potala Palace shines even more
brightly, attracting more visitors. The Potala
Palace has been listed on UNESCO's list of "world
cultural heritage" sites.
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