Archive for April 6th, 2009

China Travel – Xialu Temple

Monday, April 6th, 2009

The Xialu Temple is located in Xialu Village, 20 kilometers southeast of Rikaze City in Tibet.

The temple is the ancestral temple of the Xiage Branch of Tibetan Buddhism (also known as the Pudun Branch). Historical records indicate that Xialu Temple was built in 1087 during the Song Dynasty (960-1279) and later perished in an earthquake. The present temple was rebuilt in 1320.

The temple’s main hall, called Xilulakang in Tibetan, is made of wood and stands in the south of the temple. With a three-storied front hall, two-storied back hall and wing halls, its lower and upper floors were built according to the Han (206BC-220 AD) and Tibetan styles respectively. The ground floor is a Tibetan-style scripture hall supported by 36 wooden columns in the middle and surrounded by rolling scripture corridors. The upper floor is a Han-style room with its front and south and north wing halls connected by winding corridors. All the halls have a gable and hip roof and are covered with green glazed tiles. Color drawings painted on the walls retain the architectural style of the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368). Located above the front hall, in Budun Hall, is a sacrificial pagoda built to enshrine the founder, Budun. Along the walls of the rolling scripture corridors are various frescos that combine the artistic style of the Central Plains and Buddhist art from India and Nepal. The frescos are among the earliest specimens painted with colorful themes in Tibet. The temple also boasts a large number of cultural relics.

(Source: chinaculture.org)

Beijing Olympic – Zhang takes gold to break ROK’s 24-year reign

Monday, April 6th, 2009
Zhang takes gold to break ROK's 24-year reign
(L-R) Yun, Zhang and Park on the podium. (Photo by Jed Jacobsohn/Getty Images)

(BEIJING, August 14)– Zhang Juanjuan of China broke the Republic of Korea’s 24-year stranglehold on the Women’s Individual event, claiming the gold medal with the last arrow of a riveting final against Park Sung-hyun at the Olympic Green Archery Field on Thursday.

Zhang takes gold to break ROK's 24-year reign
Zhang bites the gold medal. (Photo credit: Jed Jacobsohn/Getty Images)

To win the Olympic title, No. 27 seed Zhang had to beat all of the top three seeded ROK women, including Park, the Individual gold medalist at the Athens 2004 Olympic Games.

Zhang won the final 110-109.

Zhang takes gold to break ROK's 24-year reign
Zhang Juanjuan shoots in the match. (Photo credit: Xinhua)

In the semifinal, Zhang took out the No. 1 ranked archer in the world, Yun Ok-hee, 115-109. Zhang’s score equaled the Olympic record Park set earlier in the day. In the quarterfinal, she beat Joo Hyung-jung 106-101.

Yun Ok-hee went on to win the bronze medal against Kwon Un- sil of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea 109-106.

Khatuna Lorig of the United States was fifth, Hayakawa Nami of Japan sixth, Joo seventh and Mariana Avitia of Mexico eighth.

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(Source: en.beijing2008.cn)

Chinese Culture – Characters and Augury

Monday, April 6th, 2009

The story-telling method is also called Ce Zi and is a traditional Chinese method of fortune telling by analyzing the parts and number of strokes in Chinese characters of personal names. If the fortune-teller finds that the combination of characters, number of strokes, etc. used in your name is unlucky, then you should think of changing it!

Ce Zi was prevalent in ancient China and this way of augury is still practiced in some rural areas in China nowadays. In the augury, a fortuneteller breaks a Chinese character down into smaller, simpler components, analyze them and then tell the fortune or misfortune of the person who wants to know his/her fate through Ce Zi.

There is another augury related to Chinese characters. It is a fortune telling tool that is able to predict whether you are born with a fortunate life (living comfortably) or a poor and hard life. It uses your date of birth and hour of birth to generate eight characters using four Celestial Stems and four Terrestrial Branches. With the eight different characters many different readings can be performed to check for wealth, marriage and so on.

Source: chinaculture.org