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Muta Temple

Muta Temple

Muta Temple (木塔寺) — officially Wanshou Temple (万寿寺) — is a iconic wooden pagoda in downtown Zhangye, one of the city’s ‘Five Elements Pagodas’ and a famous Hexi Corridor architectural landmark.

Basics

Location: Xianfu South Street, central Ganzhou District (near Central Square)

Founded: Northern Zhou Dynasty (557–581 AD); rebuilt Sui 582 AD

Current pagoda: Rebuilt 1926 (after 1920 storm destruction)

Status: Gansu Provincial Cultural Relic Protection Unit

Architecture

Height: 32.8 meters

Shape: Octagonal, 9 stories

Structure:

1–7F: Brick exterior, wooden eaves

8–9F: All wood

No nails/rivets — held by Dougong brackets, beams, columns

Details:

Dragon carvings on each corner with pearl in mouth

Wind chimes hanging from eaves

Brick inscriptions & wooden lattice windows

Internal stairs to top (city view)

History & Legends

Built to house Buddha relics (one of 16 Aśoka pagodas in China)

Tang: Supervised by General Yuchi Jingde (639 AD)

Tang Monk Xuanzang prayed here on his return from India

Local saying: “Zhangye’s Muta Temple stands nearly touching the sky”

“Wooden Pagoda Evening Bell” — one of Eight Zhangye Scenes

Visiting Info

Hours: 08:00–17:00 (last entry 16:30)

Ticket: Free (usually)

Inside: Houses Zhangye Folk Custom Museum

Nearby: Central Square, night markets, old town

Tip

Climb the narrow stairs to the 9th floor for panoramic Zhangye skyline — worth the climb!

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