
Kumsansa or Gold Mountain Temple is located on Mt. Moaksan near Chonju.
Originally built in 599 CE, according to the temple records 38 monks were
ordained at the temple in that same year. The present buildings were erected
in 1635 after the others were destroyed in the Japanese invasion of the
16th century. There are many treasures which pre-date the present buildings.
According to a legend, Master Chinp'yo, after returning from China,
had a vision of Maitreya Buddha and he received a book on divination in
two rolls and 189 divination sticks from Maitreya. This book on divination
then became the principal authority on the subject in Korea. Due to this,
King Kyongdok invited the master to his palace in order to receive instruction
and predictions.
Master Chinp'yo decided to build a temple to Maitreya and call it
Kumsansa. On his way, he met a dragon king who presented the master with
a robe of jade and guided him to Kumsan forest. There, miraculously, men
and women from everywhere came to help. The temple was built in a few days
and, when it was completed, Maitreya came to give Chinp'yo hisfinal ordination.
In memory of this event, Chinp'yo created a Maitreya Buddha Hall, the focal
point of Kumsansa. After that, the master set up a platform and taught
the people well.
This Maitreya Buddha Hall is over 20 meters high. It is the only ancient,
wooden, three-story hall in Korea. Each story has a different name and
so a different name board. The first floor is Great Compassion Hall,Ħħthe
second is Dragon Flower Meeting and the third is Maitreya Hall.ĦħIn order
to support the immense roof, special corner eave pillars were created.
Enshrined is a statue of the future Buddha, Maitreya. This gilded, standing
statue is 11.8 meters high and is flanked by two attendants, each 8.8 meters
high. The Maitreya
statue is modeled after a Shilla statue although it actually dates from
the early 20th century. The hand position is one of have no fear.ĦħThe
assistants date from the Choson Period. On the southern wall is a painting
of Maitreya giving the monks' rules to Chinp'yo.
In Korea, the traditional buildings of palaces and temples are painted
with amazingly bright colored geometrical patterns. These designs are called
tanch'ong,Ħħmeaning red and blue,Ħħthe principle colors used. Tanch'ong
was introduced to the peninsula through the Koguryo Kingdom, probably somewhere
around the time that Buddhism was accepted, in 372CE.
The main aim of tanch'ong is protection of the wood. The wood is carefully
treated before applying the pigments in order to protect it from humidity
and decay. Then the design to be painted on is outlined using chalk powder
over pinholes made in the paper of the design. Now the wood is ready to
receive the bright colors of the mineral paints used. Finally a coating
of oil is applied and the paintings are gone over with a hot iron. In this
way the wood is protected from the elements as well as from mold and bugs.
In front of the Maitreya Hall is a strange hexagonal stone pagoda, dating
from the Koryo Period, probably late 10th century.
Kumsansa Temple TEL : (0658)43-4441
| Mode | Departure |
Arrival | Duration |
|---|
| Express Bus | Seoul Terminal |
Kimje | 3:10 |
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| Train(Saemaul-ho) | Seoul Station |
Kimje | 2:45 |
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