Secondly, it is mentioned in/s/blog _ 7D8F4 eee01kloc-0/004q.html.
About Ding Hui Temple
1. In the middle and lower reaches of the Jianshan Mountains in Phuket, there used to be a temple-Ding Hui Temple (see the position shown by arrow 2 on the satellite map), which was commonly called "Jianshan Temple" by local villagers. This temple was built in the 38th year of Jiajing (1559). At the same time, the upper courtyard is Ding Hui Temple, and the lower courtyard is Ruyi Temple, with the same abbot. Later, it was disturbed by Sha Dingzhou (1645 65438+ February), and Ding Hui Temple was burnt down by fire.
The original Ding Hui Temple is located in the middle of the picture, and the light gray building on the hillside is slightly dark gray.
Color, location of blue roof building.
Take a closer look, it is the picture above. In the picture, at the foot of the iron tower in front of this dark gray and blue roof building is the original Ding Hui Temple.
Where the gate is located, the temple seat faces south, and the temple gate is facing the Xishan Mountain and Dianchi Lake in the distance. The temple is Sanjin, covering an area of 15 mu.
△ From page 267 of Heilinpu Town Annals written by Heilinpu Town Editorial Committee in April, we can still find out, 1995:
"Ding Hui Temple: Located at the top of Phuket Island in the north of Zhenbei, it was built at the same time as Ruyi Temple and completed in the same year. The temple covers an area of 15 mu, with 3 entrances and the gate facing south. The incident temple in Shading Prefecture was destroyed in the late Ming Dynasty and was not rebuilt later. Today, this website still exists. " (Note: Ding Hui Temple was destroyed by soldiers' fire in the rebellion in Shading Prefecture (1645 65438+February)). In 2009-20 1 1 year, the ruins of temples and Jianshan were razed, and now Wuhua prison in the above photo has been built. )
△ In order to prove that this long-lost Ding Hui Temple, which is not listed in the historical records of Ming and Qing Dynasties, really exists, we can also learn from the original inscription of Ruyi Temple in Bukiet Village (the temple was demolished in 1989):
According to the Inscription on Ruyi Temple written by Ren Yin in the 30th year of Wanli (1605), namely "Inscription on the Construction of Ruyi Temple": "In the thirty-eight years of Jiajing, the old monk zong founded this temple in the mountains of Dabuji Village, and I hope that the Vatican will repair its meaning. ..... Mingzong conspired to open the temple ... Disciple Huixian cooperated to build it ... Monk Hui Ruyi advised to raise wine doves and rebuild the Three Buddhas Hall. "
In the twenty-first year of Guangxu (1895), Yi Wei's Rebuilding the Monument of Ruyi Temple said: "Mu had this brake in Yunnan in the early Ming Dynasty. There are Ding Hui Temple in the upper house, Ruyi Temple in the lower house, monks in the second house and abbot Mingzong. There is only one origin, so the Xiang Sheng lamp that worships Buddha can last for a long time. Due to the chaos in Shading Prefecture, Ding Hui was destroyed by fire, and the monks of the second temple lived in Ruyi Temple. After hundreds of years, monks are not afraid of outsiders' invasion, but only ashamed of the Vatican's empty pockets. " The two monasteries, as the inscription says, "money has been given in past dynasties, but the ceremony is endless."
—— Excerpted from/kloc-0, pages 290 and 305 of Heilinpu Town Annals written by the editorial board of Heilinpu Town in April, 1995.
The inscription on the picture is "Inscription of Ruyi Temple", which is now standing in the courtyard of Phuket.
Ruyi Temple is recorded in Daoguang's "Kunming County Records" Volume IV-Ancestor Sacrifice: "Jinjing Temple is located in Shangshan North to Phuket Village ... Ruyi Temple is in the south of the temple." Ding Hui Temple ceased to exist in Daoguang period.
2. Ding Hui Temple is located in Qingjian Mountain (known as Mujiajian Mountain in Ming and Qing Dynasties) in Phuket. It belongs to the Mu ancestral hall and is the home of Mu descendants. Mu believes in Buddhism. Because it was built in Jiajing 38 years (1559), it was destroyed by soldiers in Shading State at the end of 1645.
△ It should be noted here that the deputy research librarian of Nanjing Museum in his book "Analysis of Mu Chang Tomb in Ming Taizu and Guizhou and Related Issues"-the discovery from the epitaph of Mu Chaofu's wife Chen (this article was published in Southeast Culture 1 1): "The Mu family in Guizhou is a Buddhist.
The author thinks that Ding Hui Temple, which was built in the thirty-eighth year of Jiajing in Puji Jianshan, Kunming, together with Shao Lei's various acts of offering sacrifices to the Buddha, can make up for this "blank".
△ In the thirty-eighth year of Jiajing (1559), when Mu Chaobi was in charge of Yunnan, Mu Lin was buried in Dajijian Mountain in Kunming for a hundred years. As for why Mu Lin was not buried in Nanjing General Mountain thousands of miles away, readers can understand from Shao Wen above that the present situation of Mu Lin's tomb (see satellite map 1 arrow) is described in the essay "The Present Situation of Mu Ying's Family Buried in Kunming in Ming Dynasty and Related Issues".
▲ Another thing: Shao also mentioned that the history book (so the wife of Guizhou Gongmu) said that Chen had "donated 3,200 yuan to help make great contributions", so Ming Shizong rewarded Chen and "ordered the officials to reward him with gifts". He believes that donating money to help big workers is "no Yunnan". -(According to the 499th Record of Sejong: Guimao in July of the 40th year of Jiajing, the Duke of Guizhou invested 3,200 pieces of silver to help the great cause, gave 420 pieces of silver, and sent a letter to Yunnan as a gift. )
However, the author believes that this possibility cannot be ruled out, because according to records, in February of Jiajing thirty-seven years, "Guizhou invested to run an official high school", and the amount of wood mining funds in this province should be above1382,000 silver, which is too expensive for a province. Begging for accommodation in Guangdong, Jiangxi, Yunnan, Guangxi and other provinces, it is difficult to increase the workload of silver helpers. Generals from Guangdong, Yunnan, Jiangxi and Shanxi used to send salt courses to ICBC, but their supervisors stayed in the province. Civil and military officials should give money to help them, and pay attention to the crime and examples of sheep stolen goods. In addition, there is no expedient measure for many parties to plan to deal with. Excerpt from "Ministry",-(Sejong's memoirs, volume 456)
△ The above two pieces of information contained in Sejong's memoir should prove what Gao Shouxian wrote in the article "A Brief Introduction to the Construction of Beijing in the Ming Dynasty": "At the end of the Ming Dynasty, the court often advised officials to donate money to help big projects. Jiajing, the construction is the most complicated,' insufficient funds, people to help' "; I appreciate your help, and I will accept it again. -("History of the Ming Dynasty" Volume 78, Note: Gao Wen is from "Historical Archives")
This content has nothing to do with this article, just by the way.
3. Ding Hui Temple, which was built in the 38th year of Jiajing (1559), was destroyed by a fire in Shating Prefecture (1645), and it only existed for 86 years. That was more than 360 years ago.