Mansion, Temple and Cemetery of Confucius in Qufu
The Mansion, Temple and Cemetery of Confucius
in Qufu, Shandong Province, are cultural sites and attract tourists from both China and
abroad. In 1994, they were listed as world cultural heritage sites.
The Mansion of Confucius is the living quarters of the first grandson of Confucius, a
great philosopher, educator and a founder of Confucianism. It is also known as Master
Yansheng's Mansion because in 1055, or the second year of the reign of Song Emperor
Zhaozhen, Kong Zongyuan, the 46th generation male descendant of Confucius was given the
title "Master Yansheng." The title w as passed down to Kong Decheng, the 77th
generation male descendant of Confucius. Built on an area of 160,000 square meters, the
mansion has nine courtyards with 463 rooms along the east, west and middle mutes. The
houses along the middle route are the main part of the mansion. The first four yards
contain offices and the other five serve as residences. At the rear is a garden. The
mansion stores more than 9,000 volumes of files from 1534 (the 13th year of the reign of
Ming Emperor Jiaqing) to 1948 and great quantifies of rare and precious cultural and
historical relics.
The Temple of Confucius was, in various dynasties, a place for worshipping Confucius. In
478 BC, the second year after Confucius' death, the ruler of the State of Lu converted the
three-room Confucius' former mansion into a temple and this became a place for worshipping
Confucius. The temple was constantly renovated and expanded to its present size by
emperors of the Western Han Dynasty and following historical periods. It covers an area of
218,000 square meters and is 1,120 meters in length from south to north. There are nine
courtyards and 466 rooms along three routes in the left, right and middle. The temple has
an outer wall, with four corner towers, which shelters ancient pines. The main buildings
along the middle route are Kuiwen Pavilion, Thirteen Stele Pavilion, Xingtan Pavilion,
Dacheng Hall, Hall of Confucius' Wife and Shengji Hall. Dacheng hall stands out and is the
main hall where Confucius was worshipped.
The temple houses some 2,000 tablets dating from the Western Han Dynasty fright up to the
founding of New China; they are one of the largest collections of tablets in the country.
There are now three exhibition halls displaying tablets from the Han Dynasty and Six
Kingdoms of Wei, stone statues from the Han Dynasty and calligraphic carvings on Yuhonglou
tablets. The 17 tablets of Han Dynasty are the largest collection in the country by the
quantity reserved in one place.
The Cemetery of Confucius is about 1.5 kilometers north of Qufu and is the Confucius
family cemetery. It takes up 1.998 million square meters and around it there is a
seven-kilometer-long hedge. The pavilions, towers, halls and archways built in various
historical periods are set in a forest. Behind the Zhushui Bridge is the graveyard, dating
from the Eastern Zhou, which houses the tomb of Confucius, the tombs of his son Kong Li
and grandson Kong Ji. The tomb of Confucius is 6.2 meters high and has a circumference of
88 meters.
Included in the UNESCO world heritage list in 1994.