Heilongdawang Temple

Heilongdawang Temple
Religion
AffiliationChinese folk religion
Location
LocationShaanxi, China
Architecture
StyleChinese temple architecture
Completed1982, current building

The Heilongdawang Temple (literally Temple of the Great Black Dragon King) is a prominent Chinese folk temple located in Northern Shaanxi.[1] The temple enshrines the Black Dragon King with the imperially conferred title of Marquis of the Efficacious Response (灵应侯; Língyīnghóu).[1] Dragon kings (龙王; lóng wáng) are water deities popular in droughty Northern China.[1]

The temple was completely destroyed during the anti-religious campaigns of the Cultural Revolution, but rebuilt from scratch in 1982,[1] and since then has enjoyed growing popularity in Northern Shaanxi, becoming a case study of the revival of Chinese folk religion in sociological research, as hundreds of thousands of pilgrims and other visitors come for the annual six-day festival.[1] The temple is located in an area known as the Dragon King Valley (Longwanggou).[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Fan Lizhu and Chen Na, "Resurgence of Indigenous Religion in China" (2013) p. 11

Sources

See also