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was granted the titles of Prince of Taiyuan and Prince of Beiping. His status as a powerful warlord

in the Hebei region is reflected in the design of his tomb, which includes an antechamber,

a rear chamber, and two side rooms, a design identical with the contemporaneous tomb of Zhao

Dejun discovered in Beijing; such designs during the Five Dynasties were traditionally the privilege

of individuals of higher rank. Wang Chuzhi died in the twentieth year of the Tianyou (923

CE). The design of the mural paintings was likely adapted from similar murals at Chang'an, a

reflection of Wang Chuzhi's status as a warlord of Hebei and his social position in the capital.

Buddhist culture introduced a variety of artistic forms and influences into Han and Tang

culture. Archaeological study of Chinese Buddhism has concentrated on three areas: cave temples;

monastery remains, including various Buddhist images and objects unearthed from the

sites; and subterranean crypts beneath Buddhist pagodas. The most important monastery remains

excavated in recent years have been the Xiude Monastery in Quyang, Hebei province; the

Wanfo Monastery in Chengdu, Sichuan province, and the Longxing Monastery, in Qingzhou,

Shandong province. Artifacts from the pagoda crypts, such as the renowned Famen Monastery

in Fufeng, Shaanxi province and the Longxing Monastery in Qingzhou, have yielded extraordinary

objects that represent the artistic quintessence of Chinese Buddhist culture.

The three hundred Buddhist statues discovered in 1996 at the Longxing Monastery in

Qingzhou date from the Northern Wei, Eastern Wei, Northern Qi, Sui, Tang, and the Northern

Song dynasties; most of the images, however, were made during the Northern Wei and Northern

Qi. 10 During the later years of the Northern Song (the early twelfth century), the creation of

Buddha statues ceased altogether; existing statues were destroyed and buried. Several stylistic

dominate the Longxing Buddhist images: their splendid colors and use of gold inlay and the

close-fitting drapery of the figures ("as if just coming out of water"); the latter feature is characteristic

of Eastern Wei and Northern Qi statues and reflects the influence of Gandharan style,

contrasting with the loose gown and sash normally seen in the Northern Wei images.

The Famen Monastery was one of four Tang imperial sponsored Buddhist monasteries

that enshrined relics of the Buddha. During the Zhenguan, Xianqing, Zhide, Zhenyuan, and

Yuanhe eras, the imperial court ordered the skull, fingerbones and other relics to be brought

from the Famen Monastery to the palace; with the persecution of Buddhism under the

Huichang era (845 CE), the worship of the relics ceased, but during the fourteenth year of

the Xiantong era (873 CE), the imperial court again had the relics brought to the palace and

returned them to the monastery at the end of the year. One year later, the Buddha's relics were

buried in the subterranean crypt beneath the pagoda and lay there undisturbed until their

excavation in 1987.

The subterranean crypt of the Famen Monastery pagoda is oriented along a north-south

axis, with a stairway, tunnel, antechamber, middle and rear chambers constructed of stone

slabs. This remains the only known three-chambered subterranean crypt, a layout evidently

derived from that of imperial mausoleums. Two stone steles were erected at the northern end of

553 | HAN AND TANG DYNASTIES

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