Longfeng Temple
Longfeng Temple | |
---|---|
官澳龍鳳宮 | |
Kinmen County, Fujian | |
Country | Republic of China |
Geographic coordinates | 24°31′06″N 18°24′45″E / 24.51821°N 18.4126°E |
Architecture | |
Completed | 1611 |
Direction of façade | West |
Guan'ao Longfeng Temple (
Kinmen County, Fujian. The temple's main deity is the sea goddess Mazu
.
History
The temple was founded in 1611, making it one of the oldest Mazu temples in Kinmen; at the time, it only housed one
Retreat of the Republic of China to Taiwan. Therefore, the statue was moved into Tianfei Temple in 1949, and the temple was renamed to Longfeng Temple. The new name, which translates to "dragon-phoenix temple", is a reference to these two deities.[1][2]
: 8–21
On September 26, 2007, Longfeng Temple was protected as a county-level monument.[3]
Worship
Longfeng Temple has three statues of
Guangong, which used to be placed in another temple named Chicheng Temple (赤埕宮) that was abandoned.[1]
Other statues worshipped include
Zhusheng Niangniang, Shancai Tongzi, Yunü, Liwangye (黎王爺), Xingwangye (邢王爺), Gaowangye (高王爺), Qiuwangye (邱王爺), Yajinggong (壓境公), and Yajingniang (壓境娘).[4]
Architecture
Historically, Longfeng Temple was the primary temple in the area, so the temple was built extravagantly. The rectangular complex has two halls that are seven kaijian (eight columns) wide in a layout that is similar to
Ming Dynasty palace architecture. The central courtyard has a stage for plays, likely to protect it from marauding pirates. The interior has a variety of paintings and wooden sculptures of historic value. Most of the structural supports date from when the temple was reinforced in 1970.[1][2]
: 113–141
See also
References
- ^ a b c "官澳龍鳳宮". 臺灣宗教文化資產 (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Ministry of the Interior. Retrieved March 19, 2021.
- ^ a b 金門縣定古蹟官澳龍鳳宮調查研究計畫 (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Kinmen County: 金門縣文化局. March 2008. Retrieved March 19, 2021.
- ^ "官澳龍鳳宮". National Cultural Heritage Database Management System (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Bureau of Cultural Heritage. Retrieved March 19, 2021.
- ^ "官澳龍鳳宮". 金門縣文化局 (in Chinese (Taiwan)). December 11, 2018. Retrieved March 19, 2021.