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Where is Laojun Mountain in Henan?

Laojun Mountain, located three kilometers southeast of Luanchuan County, Luoyang City, Henan Province, is the main peak of Funiu Mountain, 800 miles away from Qinling Mountain.

Laojunshan, formerly known as Shijingshan, was renamed Laojunshan by Emperor Taizong because Li Er lived in seclusion in the Western Zhou Dynasty. Located 3 kilometers southeast of Luanchuan County, Luoyang City, Henan Province, it is the longest mountain range in Taoism. Laojun Mountain is the main peak of Funiu Mountain, with an altitude of 22 17 meters, which was formed in the continental orogeny19 billion years ago.

Laojun Mountain is now a world geological park, a national AAAAA tourist attraction, a national geological park, a national nature reserve and a provincial key cultural relics protection unit. It is a holy place for Taoist believers in northern China and an outstanding representative of landscape culture in the Central Plains. Laojunshan was formed in the continental orogeny19 billion years ago, and the crustal tectonic movement entered a new stage of development. With the end of the period of crustal tectonic movement, plates collide strongly and form contact zones.

Main attraction

1, bronze statue of Laozi

20 14 The bronze statue of Laozi in Laojunshan was included as the highest bronze statue of Laozi with the highest kiness.

2. Jinding Taoist Temple Group

The Jinding Taoist complex in Laojunshan relies on the hilltop buildings, mainly including laojunmiao, Moral Mansion, Wumu Jindian, Liangbaotai, Yuhuangding, Bell and Drum Tower, Nantianmen, Chaoyang Cave, Avenue Courtyard, Shinto Overpass, Cloister, etc. They are all built in the form of royal palaces in Ming and Qing Dynasties, especially Jin Dian, Liangbaotai and Yuhuangding, which have become the highlights of Laojunshan Taoist temples.

3. Taiqing Taoist Temple

Taiqing Taoist Temple, the peak of the mountain, was built in the Northern Wei Dynasty and rebuilt in previous dynasties. Wei Chijingde supervised the renovation in the Tang Dynasty, which flourished in the Ming Dynasty. For thousands of years, it has been a holy place for pilgrims to worship in Henan, Shaanxi, Anhui, Hubei and other places in the Central Plains, and pilgrims from the southeast coast also come here. Only the Eight Winds Pilgrimages in Kaohsiung, Kowloon, Taiwan Province, each group has as many as 100 people.

Reference to the above content: Baidu Encyclopedia-Laojunshan