Fuhu Temple Qiaotou Hotel - Emeishan - China
Fuhu Temple Qiaotou Hotel hotel city: Emeishan - Country: China
Address: Group 7 Baoguo County Huangwan County; zip code: 614200
Surrounded by luxuriant natural landscapes, Fuhu Temple Qiaotou Hotel is a peaceful retreat in Baoguo Village. For your convenience, both free WiFi and free parking space are available here.
-- 峨眉山伏虎寺桥头饭店位于报国村,是一处宁静的乐园,周围环绕着葱茏的自然美景。为了客人的方便,宾馆设有免费WiFi以及免费停车位。 宾馆距离南京火车站有1小时车程,距离乐山火车北站有50分钟车程。 客房布置整洁,设有木家具,自然采光充足。客房还提供空调、平板卫星电视、水壶以及带拖鞋和免费洗浴用品的浴室。 客人可以在户外散步,享受乡村气息。此外,宾馆内的餐厅为客人准备了丰盛的乡村风格美食。
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Fuhu Monastery, Emei Shan
Dinning in the canteen of the Fuhu Monastery at Emei Shan.
Mount Emei Travel Guide | Travel Guide China
Mount Emei is one of the “Four Great Buddhist Mountains” in China. It has a steep terrain and beautiful scenery. It is known as the “Emei World Show”. The top of the mountain is the highest, with an altitude of 3,099 meters, and more than 2,700 meters above the Emei Plain. There are many monuments and temples on the mountain, including Baoguo Temple, Fuhu Temple, Elephant Washing Pond, Longmen Cave, Sheshen Cliff, Emei Buddha Light, etc. It is one of China’s tourism, recreation and summer destinations.
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Best Attractions and Places to See in Emeishan, China
Emeishan Travel Guide. MUST WATCH. Top things you have to do in Emeishan. We have sorted Tourist Attractions in Emeishan for You. Discover Emeishan as per the Traveler Resources given by our Travel Specialists. You will not miss any fun thing to do in Emeishan.
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List of Best Things to do in Emeishan, China
Mount Emei (Emeishan)
Mt. Emei Natural Ecology Monkey Reserve
Baoguo Temple
Wannian Temple
Daping Jixue Scenic Resort
Qingyin Pavillion
Fuhu Temple
Huazang Temple
Heilongjiang Plank Road
Yuxian Temple
Emeishan, the highest of the 4 Sacred Mountains of China and Leshan, home of the Giant Buddha
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From Chengdu, we took the high speed train to Emeishan. Then bus #12 from the High speed Emeishan Railway Station (峨眉山高铁站) and get off at 旅游公交站 travelers station. Paid the fare of 1 yuan/ea on the bus. Weather was bad so we didn't take the cable car to the Golden Summit because we won't be able to see anything except fog.So we just walked around to Baoguo and Fuhu temples. The next day, the hotel arranged for us a transfer to Leshan for 20 yuan/ea. The driver dropped us right at Leshan Ticket Office and the store where we could leave our luggage (Left luggage) for 5 RMB for each bag. Then a free van took us to the East entrance to start the visit with the giant laying Buddha at the Occidental Buddha Capital 1st, then slowly climb and going through very cool caves, going towards the Leshan Giant Buddha (Da fo), 71-metre tall, built between 713 and 803. He's the tallest
stone Buddha statue in the world . Then we took the bus #3 to Emeishan Railway Station to take the bullet train back to Chengdu.
Music credit: Running in the Rain by Jasper Sawyer
Our Monastery Stay - Emeishan - China
Some videos from my Travels around the world! Not much by way of commentary but I plan to make better videos going forward as I learn some editing techniques!
Wuhou Temple, Chengdu, (成都) Sichuan
Relic of Fuhu Temple
Boss upgrade skill quest 100
Taichi exercise at Chunyan Dian Temple, Emei Shan (Sichuan, China)
Nga Mi 4 - Fuhu Si - Phuc Ho Tu
Trên đường hạ san Nga Mi, phật tử đã được hướng dẫn đến viếng Phục Hổ Tự. Tương truyền trong đệ nhị thế chiến Nhật quân đã thất bại khi đi tìm Phục Hổ Tự để chiếm pho tượng Quán Thế Âm Bồ Tát bằng đồng cao 7m vì địa thế hiểm trở của chùa, nằm rất sâu trong rừng.
Splendid China Part Two - From Leshan to Emei Shan
Splendid China Part Two From Leshan to Emei Shan Great Buddha, Wannian Temple and Buddha Water Cave
Baoguo Temple
2008 June 19 Back to Mt. Emei for a second trip, this time I took a video of the chant/ritual/ceremony (what's best to call it?) at Baoguo Temple. I probably wasn't supposed to be filming, but I wanted to show the world the beauty of what we as students witnessed while in China. Seeing real people engaged in spiritual harmony is an interesting sight to behold. The would sit and chant for a long time, and we could watch them quietly.
wudanggongfu | Master ChenShixing
Wudang Taoist Kungfu School daoistkungfu.com
Master Chen Shixing
An orthodox 15th-generation exponent of Wudang kungfu,Priest Chen Shixing loved wushu since childhood. He started to learn Waijia pugilism at age of seven. Later he had Zhong Yunlong, the 14th-generation master of Wudang kungfu of Sanfeng Sect, as his teacher. He therefore studied wudang kungfu all-heartedly for long years. Finally, he became the main contemporary exponent and representative of wudang kungfu.
Nga Mi 3 - Wannie Si - Van Nien Tu
Vạn Niên Tự tại núi Nga Mi nhưng lại mang mầu sắc Tây Tạng. Thầy Hằng Trường và thầy Hằng Đức hướng dẫn phật tử lễ bái Quán Thế Âm Bồ Tát và Phổ Hiền Bồ Tát trước khi vào chánh điện. Tại đây phật tử hữu duyên được chùa tặng một hoàng điều có đóng dấu triện của Hoàng đế Trung Hoa thời xưa.
Mount Wudang 2
another clip
aerial images videos on Emei mountain scene in Sichuan travel tourism 航拍峨眉山壯美風光 恍如仙境
The slopes of Emei Shan have been inhabited since as early as 10,000 years ago. It was originally a Taoist retreat.
Pugong, a medicinal plant farmer, built the Puguang Hall on the Golden Summit in the 1st century AD. In the 3rd century, the Puxian form of Buddhism (which centers on devotion to the Bodhisattva Puxian, or Samantabhadra) became dominant on Emei and the Chinese monk Huichi built the Puxian Temple (now the Wannian Temple) at the foot of the Guanxinpo Terrace.
In the mid-9th century, the Song Emperor Zhao Kuangyin sent a Buddhist mission headed by Master Jiye to India. On his return he was authorized to build temples on Mount Emei, where he preached and translated the
Indian Buddhist texts. He was also authorized to cast a Puxian bronze statue, 62 tonnes in weight and 7.85 m high, now in the Wannian Temple.
Ever since, Mount Emei has been one of the most holy places of Buddhism. Extensive rebuilding during the Ming dynasty finally converted most of Emei's Taoist temples to Buddhism.
The natural beauty and sacred significance of Emei Shan has been drawing pilgrims and tourists for 2,000 years. It was designated a World Heritage Site in 1996.
What to See at Emei Shan
Emei Shan literally means Delicate Eyebrow Mountain — it derives its name from two peaks which face each other and look like the delicate eyebrows of a Chinese classic beauty.
Emei Shan is a UNESCO World Heritage Site featuring many temples, natural wonders and breathtaking scenery. The slopes incorporate several different climates and much wildlife, especially birds and trees. Some of the trees are more than 1,000 years old.
There are also monkeys, who are accustomed to tourists and assertive; they aren't dangerious but will beg for food and grab at bags as hikers walk along the trails. Many hikers carry walking sticks to shoo them away.
There are over 30 Buddhist temples on Emei Shan, 10 of which are large and very old. They are considered masterpieces of creative ingenuity in the way they adapt to the natural enviroment and beauty of the holy mountain.
At the mountain base is Baoguo Monastery, built in the 16th century. The monastery has serene gardens with rare plants, a library of sutras and a huge porcelain Buddha. In the stone staircase of the rear hall are figures of the Eight Immortals, betraying the temple's Taoist origins.
Further up the mountain lies the Crouching Tiger Monastery (Fuhu Si), Emei's largest temple. Once associated with the Taoist martial-arts master Zhang Sanfeng, today it is a Guanyin nunnery. Notable features include the 16th-century, 7m-high bronze Huayan Pagoda, which is engraved with 4700 Buddha images.
The Qingyin Pavilion, built against the mountainside at the foot of the Niuxin Ridge, is an ensemble of pavilions, towers, and platforms, the earliest dating from the early 6th century. Its location and the streams that run through it have earned it the name “The Mountain Garden.”
A few hours' walk or a cable car ride leads to the Golden Summit(Jinding), at 3077m. There are two temples here (the friendly Woyun Nunnery and the large Huazang Si) and thousands of padlocks inscribed with couples' names to symbolize eternal love.
Huazang Si on Jinding was founded as early as the 1st century as the Puguang Hall, later becoming the Guangxiang Temple and receiving its present royal name in 1614. It was extensively rebuilt and refurnished in the 1970s, but every effort was made to preserve its original appearance.
Jinding is the best place to experience the Four Wonders of Mt. Emei: the Buddha's Halo (rainbow-like rings that surround and move with your shadow), the Sea of Clouds, the Holy Lamp (or Divine Lights) and the Golden Summit Sunrise.
From the Golden Summit you can ride a monorail along the ridge to Wanfoding (Ten Thousand Buddha Summit), the true summit of Emei Shan.
aerial images videos on Emei mountain scene in Sichuan travel tourism 航拍峨眉山壯美風光 恍如仙境,for more information about china world news visit site at as well as business website at
chinese wudang kungfu
wudang kungfu
Trip to Leshan and Emei Shan Part 2: Map of Emei Shan & Trail to Baoguo Temple
Wu Mei Quan
Wu Mei Quan,
Xiao Bagua Quan & Luo Jia Qiang
Wu Mei Boxing style,
Small Eight Diagrams Boxing form & Luo Family Spear
The older name of this system is Wu Mei Hua Zhuang Ba Fa Quan Five Plum Blossom Posts Eight Methods Boxing
This style comes from Shanghang county which is located in Longyuan prefecture in Fujian province, right along the border with Guangdong province. It is only practiced within a few mountain villages.
The original name of this system is Wu Mei Zhuang Ba Fa Quan Five Plum Poles Eight Methods Boxing
Today the practitioners claim lineage from nun Wu Mei (Ng Mui in Cantonese) of Southern Shaolin mythology.
The standard story used today is that it was brought to the area by a nun from Eastern Guangdong who was a martial descendant of the nun Wu Mei. The system she practiced was taught by Wu Mei to the nuns of a monastery in eastern Guangdong and was only allowed to be practiced by women, and before she taught the local women the art had never been passed outside the women of the monastic community.
After that it became a special martial art practiced by the women of the community.
However lineage listings as well as evidence collected previously from older practitioners shows that this was not the case and that this system was practiced by men and women alike.
It's possible that this story was an alternate tradition, or maybe it was simply created in last few decades to help popularize the system.
The oral tradition I am about to recount was passed on by older practitioners during the 1980's national martial arts survey.
According to the oral mythology of this system, during the late 1700's-early 1800's in Shanghang county Lufeng* township's Fu Yang village there was a young man named Qiu Zhengyuan. He began to travel looking for work, and at some point he met up with and opera group from Anhui province.
He Followed them to Hangzhou working as a performer for the troop while studying martial arts with the master of the opera. After a time he married one of the opera performers named Wang Xiuying.
From Hangzhou they traveled north where at some point he and his wife broke off from the opera troop to travel to Henan province to learn the Shaolin martial arts.
While there they met and began to study under a master who had been a student of the nun Wu Mei. They settled there and studied the arts of Wu Mei for ten years.
Finally becoming homesick Qiu Zhengyuan asked his master if he and his wife could travel back to Fujian to visit his hometown. His master said he could return home for a time only if he would grant him one final request. He was to go into the mountains and find him a stalk of strong bamboo to use as a cane. He had to test each stalk he found growing by pinching it between his fingers as hard as he could.
After a long period of wandering in the mountains he finally gave up. He returned to his master and told him that no matter where he looked every stalk he tried snapped between his fingers. His master told him that he achieved true skill in the martial arts and was free to return to his hometown to live out his life and to pass on the system to those who he found fit.
After returning home Qiu Zhengyuan and his wife Wang Xiuying began to teach the local villagers the arts of Wu Mei. Not only was he highly skilled, but his wife was too. In recognition of this the local people of Shanghang county began to refer to her as Wu Mei.
It should be noted however that early records of this system uses the original name of Wu Mei Hua Zhuang Ba Fa Quan Five Plum Blossom Poles Eight Methods Boxing and does not contain mentions of the character Wu Mei. It is likely that the traditions relating to the character Wu Mei were added during the mid to late Republican era.
The character Wu Mei herself is almost certainly fictional. She first appears as a villain in a martial arts fantasy novel from the 1890's. Later she is featured in a Republican era novel as a heroine and becomes a popular character in period works of fiction. It is during this period that she is adopted as the founder of many martial arts.
*Lufeng township in Shanghang county is inhabited by the She people. They are an ancient southern Chinese group. Remnants of this once large ethnic group can be found in small pockets of widely scattered isolated mountain villages in Fujian, Zhejiang, Guangdong, and Jiangxi provinces. In certain areas such as southern Fujian and Guangdong many of the local Hakka people have She ancestry. They were mutually outcast by the majority of people living in those areas and pushed far into the rural areas. because of this there was a lot of association between the Hakka and She peoples. With their small numbers eventually many of the She were absorbed into the Hakka communities.
Why joining Shaolin Kung Fu Academy?
Bakary Traore - Shaolin Monastery instructor of Kung Fu. This is the video 6 of the series Kung Fu, Martial Art, presented by Kn Video Studio.