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Huangling Temple
Huangling Temple, originally called Yellow Ox Temple (Huangniu Temple), boasted the biggest and the oldest ancient architecture in the Three Gorges Region. The temple, it is said, first built in the Spring and Autumn Period (770 BC - 476 BC) in the commemoration of the Holy Yellow Ox who helped Yu the Great in dredging through the gorges along Yangtze River. As to the period of Three Kingdoms, Zhuge Liang (a famous strategist in the Three Kingdom period) ordered it reconstructed and wrote 'Notes of Yellow Ox Temple,' later engraved on a stele outside the Hall. However, Ouyang Xiu (a famous litterateur in the Song Dynasty) changed the name to Huangling Temple because he did not believe the artifact – the Holy Ox.
The temple is located at the base of the Yellow Ox Mountain with the Yangtze River on its south bank. The stark red walls and bright yellow roofs made the temple stunning and magnificent. Visible upon entering the Front Gate via the stone stairway, the Hall of King Yu the Great faces a prominent theater stage. The main hall is supported by thirty-six wooden pillars, among which a Hydrographic Post recorded valuable hydrologic data.
Traditional art of Chinese architectures such as upturned eaves, corbel arches and terracotta are on display in the temple. Two steles hang up on the lintel on which the inscriptions on one of the two were said grant by Cixi (the Empress Dowager of China during 1835 and 1908). To the right of the Hall of King Yu the Great stands a Wuhou Temple (it is not the one in the Chengdu City). It is said a tree with an age of 1,700 years in the backyard of the temple was planted by Zhuge Liang.
