Shanghai Jing'an Temple is a local tyrant temple in the center of Shanghai. It is located at No. 1686, Nanjing West Road, Jing'an District. It is a Shanghai cultural relic protection unit. It is said that it was first built in the tenth year of Chiwu (247 AD) during the Three Kingdoms period under Sun Quan. It was moved to its current location in the ninth year of Jiading (1216 AD) during the Southern Song Dynasty. It was originally named Hudu Chongxuan Temple and later renamed Jing'an Temple. Jing'an Temple is one of the national key temples in the Han area and one of the ancient temples of the Shingon sect in Shanghai. Jing'an District is also named after the temple.

The total construction area of ​​Jing'an Temple is 22,000 square meters. The entire temple forms a pattern of a temple in front and a tower in the back. It consists of three main buildings, namely the Great Hall, the Heavenly King Hall, and the Three Saints Hall, and a cultural relic exhibition hall.

In front of the Jing'an Temple is a temple lane. There should be a building in the temple lane. There is a place for storing scriptures on the building. The back door leads to a spring. Under the long window behind the building is a square pool made of bluestone. There is a spring in the pool, which is called the "Sixth Spring in the World". Jing'an Temple houses precious cultural relics such as Bada Shanren's famous paintings and Wen Zhengming's original "Pipa Xing" in running script.

Jing'an Temple also has the "Eight Scenic Spots of Jing'an", which are the Chiwu Stele, the Chen Dynasty Emperor Stele, the Monk Biography Stele, the Jade Buddha Pagoda, the Hudu Temple Bell, the Ming Dynasty Hongwu Bell, the Imperial Seal for the Town Temple, and the Crane Salt Floating Clouds.

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