Serving on the Forgotten Frontier

ROK Drop

February 23rd, 2008 at 2:22 pm

Places in Korea: Beopchusa Temple

South Korea is filled with many beautiful and historical temples that litter the slopes of the many mountains that cover the nation. One of the most historical and most highly visited temples in Korea is Beopchusa Temple located in Korea’s central province of Chungcheongbuk-do:

Map of Beopchusa Temple

This 1,500 year old temple is located on the slopes of the stunning Songnisan mountain which provides incredible scenery that surrounds the temple:

View of Songnisan from Beopchusa Temple

Though the temple was first constructed in 553AD is was destroyed during the Hideyoshi invasion of Korea in 1592 and rebuilt again 30 years later. The oldest buildings at Beopchusa date from this time with some buildings dating only from the 1960’s due to expansion of the temple.

The temple is a short 3 kilometer walk from the Songnisan tourist village where the trail is surrounded with beautiful scenery:

Path to Beopchusa Temple

Once at the temple visitors are immediately impressed with the giant Golden Buddha that towers over the surrounding buildings:

Beopchusa Golden Standing Buddha

This Buddha was first constructed with cement back in the 1960’s and then replaced in 1988 with a bronze Buddha that weighed 150 tons and reached to a height of 33 meters. In 2000 the Buddha was refurbished and its gold colored coating was added. This Buddha is allegedly the tallest standing Buddha in all of Asia.

As beautiful as the giant Golden Buddha is, the most impressive site at the building in my opinion is the beautiful Palsang-jeon pagoda in the center of the temple complex:

Beopchusa Temple Pagoda

The Palsang-jeon pagoda is five stories tall and is the only original wooden pagoda left in the country. The pagoda was rebuilt in 1624 after the Hideyoshi invasion and remains in its original form to this day. It is believed that this pagoda may have influenced the construction of famous pagodas in Japan such as the Horyuji pagoda in Nara.

The pagoda is built around a lone pillar that rises up the center of the building and has an a Buddhist altar along side of it that surrounds the pillar with 1,000 miniature Buddhas and fine paintings:

Buddha at Beopchusa Temple

The pagoda is really a beautiful building and and an under-appreciated natural treasure for Korea. The temple also has many other old relics such as this gorgeous stone lantern first carved in 720AD:

Beopchusa Temple Stone Lantern

If you look at the bottom of the pedestal it has two lions holding the lantern which is a extremely rare feature in Korean artwork. The temple has many other old relics such as a giant rice bowl, a lotus cistern, and calligraphy from the Korean King Seonjo (1567-1608) enshrined in one of the buildings.

The temple is filled with many buildings that visitors can wander around and check out:

Beopchusa Temple Building

The monks are extremely friendly at the temple and have no issues with visitors wandering around the buildings and taking pictures:

Beopchusa Temple Hall

Besides wandering around the temple it is worth taking the short side path to see the ancient Buddha carved in a solid rock face:

Carved Stone Buddha at Beopchusa Temple

This Buddha was carved in 1007 and is unusual from other carved Buddhas in Korea because the Buddha has both feet flat on the ground where usually Buddha images have the feet of the Buddha folded underneath him.

Anyone that enjoys visiting the mountains and Buddhist temples in Korea really needs to take a trip to Songnisan National Park and its Beopchusa Temple:

View of the Standing Golden Buddha at Beopchusa Temple

To easiest way to reach Beopchusa temple from Seoul is to take a direct bus there from the Nambu bus terminal. Tickets cost about 13,000 won. Alternately you take a bus or train to Cheongju and then take a bus from there to the park as well. The fee to get into the temple is cheap, at about 3000 won. Of course the best time to visit is the autumn as the leaves are changing. A spectacular experience to say the least.

Popularity: 5%

- 36 views

 

RSS feed for comments on this post | TrackBack URI

By submitting a comment here you grant this site a perpetual license to reproduce your words and name/web site in attribution.