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Disambiguation Note: This entry is for the Guǎngjì Temple 廣濟寺 in Běijīng 北京, not the one in Wúhú 蕪湖..
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Guǎngjì sì 廣濟寺
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Guǎngjì sì 廣濟寺 is the headquarters of the Chinese Buddhist Association 中國佛教協會 in Běijīng 北京.
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This temple was founded as an ancestral temple for the Liú 劉 clan during the Jīn 金 Dynasty (1115-1234). It was renovated once during the Yuán 元 Dynasty (1279-1368). An excavation during the Jǐngtài 景泰 Years (1450-1456) of the Míng 明 Dynasty yielded a number of Buddhist artifacts carved in stone.
In 1457 a monk from Shānxī 山西, Shànhuì 善慧, and his disciple Yuánhóng 圓洪 rebuilt the temple and named in Hóngcí guǎngjì Temple 弘慈廣濟寺. The temple was renovated several more times over the following years. In 1466 (Chénghuà 成化 2), 1584 (Wànlì 萬曆 12), and 1694 (Kāngxī 康熙 33). Before the modern period they temple was destroyed by fires at least three times.
In the early Qīng 清, the monk Héngmíng 恒明 changed the lineage of this temple from Línjì Chán 臨濟禪 to Vinaya, and he established an ordination platform. This attracted the attention of the Emperor, and made this temple an important part of Buddhism in China.
The temple was renovated again in 1924 (Mínguó 民國 13), at which point the temple's name was officially shortened to Guǎngjì Temple 廣濟寺. In January 1934 a fired destroyed half of the temple complex, including many of the temple's rare treasures, such a Míng Dynasty copy of the Lotus Sūtra, a white sandalwood Buddha image that was a gift from foreign Buddhists, and a number of ritual implements made of jade. The temple was rebuilt the following year, and again in 1952 and 1972.
Guǎngjì Temple was a very important site for Buddhism in Běijīng during the Republic. In the early years of the Republic, Zhāng Kèchéng 張克誠 lived at this temple, using it as a base to teach a number of people who became important in Republican Buddhism, such as Jiǎng Wéiqiáo 蔣維喬, Xú Wèirú 徐蔚如, and Gōng Jīxī 龔緝熙 (later ordained as Nénghǎi 能海). In 1920, Hú Zǐhù 胡子笏 and others sponsored a lecture series by Tàixū 太虛 at this temple. Many important Buddhists, both lay and ordained, attended these lectures.
In 1924, Dàojiē 道階 began the Hóngcí Buddhist Seminary 弘慈佛學院 here. it ran until 1934. In 1928, the important northern scholar of Consciousness-Only Hán Qīngjìng 韓清淨 lectured here. It is likely that at some point in the late 1920s or 1930s, the periodical Fóxué yuèkān 佛學月刊 was published here.[1]
The Chinese Buddhist Association 中國佛教協會 was established here in 1955.
In 1983, this temple was designated an important location for Hàn 漢 Buddhism.