East Zhejiang Maritime Affairs/Folk Custom Museum
The East Zhejiang Maritime Affairs/Folk Custom Museum[2] is a museum at 156 N. Jiangdong Road in Yinzhou District in Ningbo, Zhejiang, in the People's Republic of China. It is located in the Qing'an Guild Hall, a reconstructed complex which once housed a temple to the sea-goddess Mazu. After its mid-19th century restoration by Ningbo's guild of Fujianese merchants, it was acclaimed as one of the most beautiful temples in China and was used by the merchants as their guildhall. It was destroyed in 1949 as the Communists were winning the Chinese Civil War but repaired from 1997–2001. It reopened in June 2001 as a museum to eastern Zhejiang's maritime history and local arts-and-crafts. It is open daily from 8:30 am to 5:00 pm.
The museum's director is Huang Zhesu (t 黃浙蘇, s 黄浙苏, Huáng Zhèsū).[3]
Names
The diverse roles the location has served have caused it to appear in English accounts under a variety of names, particularly before the adoption of pinyin as a standard romanization scheme.
It was known as the Tianhou Temple,[1] the Tianhou Palace,[4] the Tien-how-kung[5] or Tianhou Gong,[6] the Queen of Heaven Temple,[7] the Temple of the Queen of Heaven,[5][8][9] or the Palace of the Empress of Heaven, from one of Mazu's epithets.[2] From its local pronunciation, it also sometimes appears as Tín Heo Kōng.[9] Another of Mazu's epithets sometimes gave it the name Tianfei Gong[6] or Tín Fi Kōng.[9] It is also known as the Sea Goddess Temple.[2]
After it was rebuilt by Fujianese merchants in the mid-19th century, it became known as the Fujianese Guildhall,[6] the Qing'an Guildhall,[1] or Qing'an Assembly Hall.[7] The merchants' involvement in northern maritime (北洋) trade led local Chinese to refer to it as the North Guildhall.[2] In English, it was called the Fukien[10] or Fujian Temple,[1] Fukien Guildhall,[5] Fokien Guild House[8] or Guildhouse,[11] the Guild House of Fokien Merchants,[6] and the Guildhall for the Fujian People or Fukien Hui Kuan.[12]
The present-day museum is sometimes translated as the Museum of Maritime Affairs and Folk Custom in Eastern Zhejiang.[13]
History
The complex lies at the heart of present-day Ningbo on the east bank of the Yong River as it is formed by the confluence of the Fenghua and Yuyao rivers.[2] Merchants from Fujian[14] first built it in 1191[12] under the Southern Song as a temple to the sea-goddess Mazu[14] in her role as the Empress of Heaven ("Tianhou").[lower-alpha 1] It lay at the water's edge outside the old city walls, between its East and Bridge gates.[14] It was rebuilt in the 1680s.[14] After Ningbo and Xiamen were reopened to international trade by the treaty ending the First Opium War, nine prosperous merchants—Dong Binru, Feng Yuxiang, Su Qinghe, Fei Lengkan, Fei Fusheng, Sheng Bindeng, Tong Xianglong, and Gu Xuan[2]—rebuilt the temple from 1850 to '53.[2][lower-alpha 2] S. Wells Williams considered it Ningbo's "most elegant and solid building"; at the time, it was covered with well-done calligraphic scrolls and brush drawings, particularly on holidays.[14] John Thomson, an early photographer who traveled extensively along the coasts of the Qing Empire considered it "one of the finest examples of temple architecture in the Empire."[10] He was drawn to its elaborate carvings and careful stylization: "even the minutest details among the ornaments of the building are full of deep significance to native art and the Buddhist or Hindoo mythology" (i.e., Chinese folk religion).[10] The Ningbonese scholar Dong Pei studied the temple's history, inscribing his findings on a tablet preserved at the museum.[2] It was destroyed by the Communists in 1949 during the last phases of their war against Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalists.[12] The site was further damaged during the 1960s' Cultural Revolution, with the second door being completely destroyed.[2]
The temple's ruin having been left to the elements, Ningbo's Culture and Press Bureau began renovating it in 1997.[2] It reopened to the public as a museum in June 2001, when the State Council designated it among its 5th batch of cultural relics entitled to national protection.[15] It is one of the largest surviving Mazu temples in China and some of the old stone carvings have been preserved and incorporated into the present museum.[7]
Architecture
The west-facing complex covers 5,000 square meters (1.2 acres) and consists, from front to back, of the Entrance, Second Door, Front Stage, Great Hall, Rear Stages, and Rear Chamber. The second door, having been destroyed during the Cultural Revolution, was reconstructed from historical drawings held by Southeast University. The front stage is 9.5 meters (31 ft) high, 5.2 meters (17 ft) wide, and about as deep, being roughly square. By placing it before the main hall, it was thought that the gods could enjoy watching the shows.[2] The walls were designed to produce a resonating effect during performances. The front and rear chambers and the two stages are linked by wing-rooms to one another. The southwest corner has seven side-rooms. The north side includes a separate area for greenery and the north and west sides each have a private courtyard, used as the offices for the guildhall.[2] The style is believed to have been widely influential and copied.[12]
To the north of the present complex lies Qing'an Park.
Exhibits
The museum collects regional art concerning Mazu, including large frescos.[16] Its naval exhibits include the wooden steering wheel recovered from the wreck of the SS Jiangya, which struck a mine near the mouth of the Huangpu River in 1948 as Shanghainese were fleeing to Ningbo from the oncoming Communists. Given the high number of stowaways, it is thought that more than 3000 people were killed in the explosion, making it the worst or 2nd-worst maritime disasters in history.
The museum preserves a thousand red wood carvings and a few hundred stone and brick carvings.[16] The 14 tile carvings over the entrance include Twin Dragons Playing with a Pearl, the Eight Immortals Crossing the Sea, "Dragon Tongue Squad", Fishing, Wood-cutting, Farming, and Reading.[2] The beams of the front stage mostly depict stories from the Romance of the Three Kingdoms, including Three Heroes Fighting against Lu Bu and the Empty Fort Strategy. It also includes some carvings of actors and auspicious designs such as Magpies Perching on Plum Trees, dragons, phoenixes, and peonies. The screens are engraved with paintings of six ladies. Curved rails ("Rails for Beauties to Lean On") line three sides of the stage.[2]
For younger children, it has many scale boat models with woven sails and moving parts.[7] One of the models is based upon the western-style gunboat purchased by the temple's 19th-century restorers in 1854 to suppress pirate attacks on their vessels.[16]
See also
Notes
- ↑ A Chinese legend holds that it was constructed by Koreans who commissioned some vessels from Ningbo's shipwrights but only survived a fierce storm on their way home by praying to Mazu. They then had a temple constructed in her honor the next time they returned to the city.[7]
- ↑ Reports that it was constructed in the mid-1880s[7] are mistaken.
References
Citatations
- 1 2 3 4 "Ningbo, Zhejiang, China: Ningbo Tianhou Temple or Qingan Guildhall", Library Catalogue, London: Wellcome Library.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 "A Guide to Qing'an Guild Hall", Official site, Ningbo: East Zhejiang Maritime Affairs Folk Custom Museum, 2010.
- ↑ "Programme", Maritime Heritage and Museums: Forum for Directors of the Maritime-Related Museums in China, Hong Kong: Hong Kong Maritime Museum, 2014. (Chinese) & (English)
- ↑ "Tianhou Palace", Ningbo Attractions, Trip Advisor.
- 1 2 3 Thomson, John (1898), Through China with a Camera, Westminster: A. Constable & Co., pp. 178–9.
- 1 2 3 4 Bickers (2008), "Main Hall of the Guild House of Fokien Merchants, Ningpo".
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Brown, Elise (2015), "Qing'an Assembley Hall—Ningbo, China", The Wandering Browns.
- 1 2 Bickers (2008), "Theatre Stage in the Temple of the Queen of Heaven, Fokien Guild House, Ningpo".
- 1 2 3 Bickers (2008), "Temple of the Queen of Heaven, Ningpo".
- 1 2 3 Hockley (2010), "Fukien Temple".
- ↑ Bickers (2008), "Fokien Guildhouse, Ningpo ".
- 1 2 3 4 Kögel, Eduard (2015), The Grand Documentation: Ernst Boerschmann and Chinese Religious Architecture (1906–1931), Berlin: De Gruyter, p. 171.
- ↑ "2015 Inaugural Conference Schedule", International Association for Silk-Road Studies, Seoul: Silk-Road Universities Network, 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Williams (1848), p. 101.
- ↑ "国务院关于公布第五批全国重点文物保护单位和与现有全国重点文物保护单位合并项目的通知", State Administration of Cultural Heritage, Beijing: State Council, 25 June 2001. (Chinese)
- 1 2 3 "Tianhou Temple", Ningbo Attractions, My China Tours.
Bibliography
- Bickers, Robert, ed. (2008), "Chinese Maritime Customs Service Collection", Historical Photographs of China, Bristol: University of Bristol.
- Hockley, Allen (2010), "Reframing the Past: Historical Sites, Aesthetics, & Cultural Critique", John Thomson's China, I: Illustrations of China and Its People Photo Albums (1873–1874), Boston: MIT Visualizing Cultures.
- Williams, Samuel Wells (1848), The Middle Kingdom: A Survey of the Geography, Government, Literature, Social Life, Arts, and History of the Chinese Empire and Its Inhabitants, Vol. I, London: Wiley & Putnam.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Qing'an Guild Hall. |
- Official site, Ningbo: East Zhejiang Maritime Affairs Folk Custom Museum. (Chinese) & (English)
- "浙东海事民俗博物馆", Baidu Baike. (Chinese)