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| thumb | right | 400px | View of the Wutai Shan valley Mount Wutai Shan (Chi. 五台山, Pin. Wǔtái Shān) or Qingliang (Chi. 清涼山, Pin. Qīngliáng Shān) is identified as the worldly abode of the bodhisattva of Wisdom, Manjushri, located in Shanxi Province, China. It is one of the four great sacred Buddhist mountains of China<ref>Wǔtái Shān which is associated with bodhisattva Manjushri, Éméi Shān with bodhisattva Samantabhadra, Jiǔhuá Shān with bodhisattva Kshitigarbha and Pǔtuó Shān with bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara.</ref>. Due to its unusually cold weather, with numerous medieval reported mid-summer snow falls, the mountain became known as mount Qingliang, Clear and Cool Mountain (Wyl. ri bo dwangs bsil).<ref name=“ftn2”>Mary Anne Cartelli, The Five-Coloured Clouds of Mount Wutai: Poems from Dunhuang (Leiden: Brill, 2012), 30. And, Raoul Birnbaum, “The Manifestation of a Monastery: Shen-Ying’s Experiences on Mount Wu-T’ai in T’ang Context,” Journal of the American Oriental Society 106, no. 1 (1986): 121.</ref>

Its five grass covered flat peaks are arranged in a crescent-shaped configuration and are located above the tree-line around 3,000 m. Accordingly, the mountain obtained its name Wutai Shan, the Five-Terrace Mountain. Tibetans and Mongols referred to it as Riwo Tse Nga (Wyl. ri bo rtse lnga), the Five-Peaked Mountain. The mountain peaks appear from the far distance like heavenly altars and are conventionally referred to by their cardinal directions.<ref name=“ftn3”>Raoul Birnbaum, “The Manifestation of a Monastery: Shen-Ying’s Experiences on Mount Wu-T’ai in T’ang Context,” Journal of the American Oriental Society 106, no. 1 (1986): 121.</ref> Together the peaks are believed to constitute Manjushri’s mandala with a different emanation of Manjushri residing on each peak.<ref name=“ftn4”>Karl Debreczeny, “Wutai Shan: Pilgrimage to Five-Peak Mountain,” Journal of the International Association of Tibetan Studies, no. 6 (2011): 3.</ref>

History

Since ancient times, Wutai Shan was known to be a mystical and sacred site inhabited by divine spirits, accompanied by unusual events, such as miraculous light appearances at night, that can be seen up to the present day.<ref name=“ftn5”>Ibid., 7.</ref> Thus it attracted pilgrims in search for spiritual accomplishment.<ref name=“ftn6”>Raoul Birnbaum, “The Manifestation of a Monastery: Shen-Ying’s Experiences on Mount Wu-T’ai in T’ang Context,” Journal of the American Oriental Society 106, no. 1 (1986): 122-123.</ref> In the ninth century Ch’eng-kuan (737-838), who was an influential commentator of Buddhist scriptures, having resided for ten years at Wutai Shan wrote:

:The splendid display of its resonant qualities fills the eyes and ears, and even so there are still more such excellent matters. Dragon palaces each in turn open up at night to a thousand moons. Fine and delicate grasses spread out in the mornings among hundreds of flowers. Sometimes there are ten thousand sages arrayed in space. Sometimes five coloured clouds are set firmly among the hill-gaps. Globes of light shine against the halcyon mountain. Auspicious birds soar in the hazy empyrean. One merely hears the name of the Greate Sage Manjushri and no longer is beset by the cares of human existence.<ref name=“ftn7”>Ibid., 119.</ref>

It was the repeated visionary encounters of Manjushri and other bodhisattvas during the fifth century<ref name=“ftn8”>Mary Anne Cartelli, The Five-Colored Clouds of Mount Wutai: Poems from Dunhuang (Leiden: Brill, 2012), 32. Prior Mañjuśrī gained increasing prominence in China, during the second to the fourth centuries, through the translation of various Buddhist scriptures focusing on the bodhisattva. (See canti 37-38)</ref> by pilgrims and hermits that fostered the belief that Wutai Shan is the earthly abode of Manjushri.<ref name=“ftn9”>Raoul Birnbaum, “The Manifestation of a Monastery: Shen-Ying’s Experiences on Mount Wu-T’ai in T’ang Context,” Journal of the American Oriental Society 106, no. 1 (1986): 122-123. Cartelli notes that the exact reasons of why Mount Wutai Shan became renowned as the abode of Mañjuśrī remain unknown. Mary Anne Cartelli, The Five-Colored Clouds of Mount Wutai: Poems from Dunhuang (Leiden: Brill, 2012), 37.</ref> In these visions Manjushri was reported to appear in “several forms, principally as a five-colored cloud, a glowing ball of light, a youthful prince astride a lion,”<ref name=“ftn10”>Raoul Birnbaum, “The Manifestation of a Monastery: Shen-Ying’s Experiences on Mount Wu-T’ai in T’ang Context,” Journal of the American Oriental Society 106, no. 1 (1986): 123.</ref> or in the guise of a monk or mendicant. These stories entered local traditions, commentaries<ref name=“ftn11”>Richard D. McBride, Domesticating the Dharma: Buddhist Cults and the Hwaŏm Synthesis in Silla Korea (University of Hawaii Press, 2008), 110.</ref> and were recorded on maps.<ref name=“ftn12”>A famous map of Wutai Shan, including the visionary encounters is found here: http://wutaishan.rma2.org/</ref> The accounts were then believed to be further supported by Buddhist scriptures referring to and describing Manjushri’s residence. However, it is observed that Chinese translations of Buddhist scriptures were purposely edited as to create further scriptural authority and support for recognising Wutai Shan. Thus for example the famously quoted passage confirming Wutai Shan's location in China from the Avatamsaka Sutra is only found in Chinese versions of the scripture. Thus it is debatable whether this and other statements found in the sutras were actually meant to refer to Wutai Shan and not to some other mountain whether in this or other-worldly. <ref name=“ftn13”>Mary Anne Cartelli, The Five-Colored Clouds of Mount Wutai: Poems from Dunhuang (Leiden: Brill, 2012), 38 & 43.</ref>

Manjushri became China's patron deity and the Buddhist Chinese rulers were regarded as Manjushri’s emanations.<ref name=“ftn14”>Karl Debreczeny, “Wutai Shan: Pilgrimage to Five-Peak Mountain,” Journal of the International Association of Tibetan Studies, no. 6 (2011): 6.</ref> The first monastery was likely built by the Emperor Xiaowen (r. 471-499).<ref name=“ftn15”>Mary Anne Cartelli, The Five-Colored Clouds of Mount Wutai: Poems from Dunhuang (Leiden: Brill, 2012), 32.</ref> Wutai Shan’s fame spread and was carried by the devotees across the Himalayan lands and into the plains of India. This inspired Tibetan, Mongol and Indian, scholars and practitioners to follow the accounts and explore the mountain. Once reaching the mountain, like the Chinese devotees the foreign pilgrims experienced similar visionary encounters with Manjushri. The fame of Wutai Shan had spread and thus influenced the writings of non-Chinese Buddhist scriptures such as the Svayambhu Purana (Skt. Svayaṃbhū Purāṇa), which recounts the origin of Buddhism in the Kathmandu valley.<ref name=“ftn18”>The Svayaṃbhū Purāṇa tells the history and significance of all the major Buddhist holy places of the Kathmandu valley. According to the Svayaṃbhū Purāṇa Mañjuśrī travels from his abode at Wutai Shan to the Kathmandu valley, where he blessed the Svayaṃbhūnath Stūpa. For more detail, see the site description of Svayaṃbhūnath. See also: Karl Debreczeny, “Wutai Shan: Pilgrimage to Five-Peak Mountain,” Journal of the International Association of Tibetan Studies, no. 6 (2011): 7-9.</ref> Indian, Tibetan and Mongol Buddhist teachers were often well respected by the Chinese court and thus granted a privileged position, which allowed them to establish monasteries at Wutai Shan.<ref name=“ftn19”>Karl Debreczeny, “Wutai Shan: Pilgrimage to Five-Peak Mountain,” Journal of the International Association of Tibetan Studies, no. 6 (2011): 31-33.</ref> This then led to the establishment of a great diversity of monasteries and traditions at Wutai Shan. At its height in the past, over one hundred monasteries and temples were active at Wutai Shan. Nowadays, around fifty monasteries and temples are active and can be visited, many of which follow Tibetan Buddhism.

Major Buddhist Pilgrims

Besides those who physically travelled, many visionary accounts of travels to the mountain are recorded, such as those of Guru Chöwang (1212-1270).<ref name=“ftn17”>Karl Debreczeny, “Wutai Shan: Pilgrimage to Five-Peak Mountain,” Journal of the International Association of Tibetan Studies, no. 6 (2011): 10, footnote 15.</ref>

Notes

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Further Reading

Category of Places Category of Pilgrimage Category of Manjushri