Grotto-heavens

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Grotto-heavens


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Grotto-heavens (Chinese:洞天; Pinyin: Dongtian) are a type of sacred Daoist site. Grotto-heavens are usually caves, mountain hollows, or other underground spaces. Because every community was supposed to have access to at least one grotto, there were many of them all over China. They were first organized systematically in the Tang Dynasty by Sima Chengzhen and Du Guangting. [1] The most sacred of these sites were divided into two types: The ten greater grotto-heavens and the thirty-six lesser grotto-heavens.[2]

The ten greater grotto-heavens are as follows:

  • Wangwu shan grotto 王屋山 (Henan)

Visual narrative of Mt. Wangwu --> [1]

  • Weiyu shan grotto 委羽山 (Zhejiang)
  • Xicheng shan grotto 西城山 (Shanxi)
  • Qingcheng shan grotto 西玄山 (Sichuan)

Visual narrative of Mt. Qingcheng --> [2]

  • Xixuan shan grotto 青城山 (part of Huashan, Shanxi)
  • Luofu shan grotto 赤城山 (Guangdong)

Visual narrative of Mt. Luofu --> [3]

  • Chicheng shan grotto 罗浮山 (Zhejiang)
  • Linwu shan grotto 句曲山 (Jiangsu, in Lake Tai)
  • Gouqu shan grotto 林屋山 (on Maoshan, Jiangsu)

Visual narrative of Maoshan --> [4]

  • Kuocang shan grotto 括苍山 (Zhejiang)

[edit] References

  • Kohn, Livia, ed. Daoism Handbook (Leiden: Brill, 2000).

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Kohn (2000), p. 695.
  2. ^ Kohn (2000), p. 696.
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