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The Yungang Caves are located approximately
sixteen kilometres west of Datong in Shanxi Province and consists of a
series of 53 caves. The caves are home to over 51, 000 stone sculptures
that were completed during the Northern Wei Dynasty (460 -494 AD). The
grottoes extend one kilometre from east to west and can be classified
into three major categories.
The first group consisting of Caves 1, 2,
3 and 4 are at the eastern end separate from others. Cave 1 and Cave 2
have suffered from the rigors of time and being exposed to the elements.
Cave 3, is an addition added after the Northern Wei Dynasty and is the
largest grotto among Yungang caves.
The second group of caves, 5 threw to 13
is where your tour normally begins. The grandeur of Yungang art is very
noticeable, particularly in this group of caves.
Cave 5 contains a seated Buddha with a height
of 17 meters.In Cave 6, standing in the centre of chamber is a 15-meter-high
two-story pagoda pillar. Carvings in the pagoda walls and the sides of
the cave illustrate the life of the Buddha from his birth to his attainment
of nirvana.
The Bodhisattva is engraved in Cave 7.In
Yungang Cave 8 is an extremely rare statue of Shiva seen with eight arms
and four heads and riding on a bull. Cave 9 and Cave 10 are notable for
it's front pillars and figures bearing musical instruments.Musicians playing
instruments also appear in Cave 12.Cave 11 has a square pagoda-pillar
in its centre reaching to the roof. On its four sides are carved images
of Buddha.
Cave 13 has the Buddha statue with a giant
figurine supported its right arm.The rest caves belong to the third group.
Cave 14 has eroded severely. Cave 15 is named as the Cave of Ten Thousand
Buddhas.
Caves numbering 16 to Cave 20 are the oldest
in this complexes and each one symbolizes an emperor from the Northern
Wei Dynasty and is were the subject of "Emperor is the Buddha"
is embodied. The caves from No. 21 onward are built in the later times
and cannot compare to their better-preserved counterparts.
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