Mogao Grottoes are a system of Buddhist grottoes temples near the city of Dunhuang in the Gansu Province. It is situated at a strategic point along the Silk Route, at the crossroads of trade as well as religious, cultural and intellectual influences. It was a center of culture on the Silk Road from the 4th to the 14th centuries. There are 492 grottoes of Buddhist art in Mogao Grottoes, which are famous for their statues and wall paintings. The Mogao Grottoes contain priceless paintings, sculptures, some 50,000 Buddhist scriptures, historical | |
documents, textiles, and other relics that first stunned the world in the early 1900s. With 492 painted grottoes, the Mogao Grottoes have more than eight times as many grottoes as those at India's primary two sites. That said, the Mogao Grottoes should not be seen as an isolated endeavor within China. They are merely the best example of an astonishingly widespread Buddhist grotto movement in this nation. According to local legend, in 366 AD a Buddhist monk, Le Zun, had a vision of a thousand Buddhas and inspired the excavation of the grottoes he envisioned. The number of temples eventually grew to more than a thousand. As Buddhist monks valued simplicity in life, they sought retreat in remote grottoes to further their quest for enlightenment. From the 4th until the 14th century, Buddhist monks at Dunhuang collected scriptures from the west while many pilgrims passing through the area painted murals inside the grottoes. The grotto paintings and architecture served as aids to meditation, as visual representations of the quest for enlightenment and as teaching tools to inform illiterate Chinese about Buddhist beliefs and stories. |