News & Current Events
Sacred Temple Erupts In Flames After Tourist’s Costly Mistake
After a tourist committed a grave error while at the site, a revered temple in Jiangsu, China, caught fire.
The tragic event happened at Wenchang Pavilion on Fenghuang Mountain in Zhangjiagang on Wednesday. At approximately 11 a.m. local time, the three-story building was completely destroyed by fire.
Fortunately, officials were able to verify that no one had been hurt and that the fire had been kept controlled enough to avoid spreading to the dense wooded areas nearby.
But the aftermath’s devastation, which includes footage of parts of the roof collapsing on social media, demonstrates the disaster’s scope.
Although the cause of the fire is now being investigated, preliminary results suggest that a visitor’s inappropriate usage of candles and incense at the historic monument was most likely the source of the fire.
Additionally, officials guaranteed that no important historical artifacts had been destroyed and that the pavilion, which was constructed in October 2009, had no cultural relics.

The current pavilion, one of several contemporary structures on the property, was commissioned in 2008 and finished in 2009. It was constructed with a reinforced concrete frame.
The ancient Yongning Temple was about 1500 years old, and once it was finished, it was run by the nearby Yongqing Temple.
On Fenghuang Mountain, the ancient temple was constructed in 536 during the Southern Liang dynasty.
Moreover, it bears the significance of being one of the ‘four hundred eighty glorious temples’ of the Southern Dynasties in the poem written by the renowned poet Du Mu of the Tang Dynasty.
At the end of the Yuan Dynasty, Shi Nai’an wrote Water Margin, a novel regarded as one of the four great works of Chinese literature, at Wenchang Pavilion, a section of the temple that housed his hermitage.
However, the 1990s saw the reconstruction of the present temple.
Local officials have promised to reinforce current safety measures in place to lower the danger of another catastrophic fire while also taking additional action based on the investigation’s findings.
The most recent fire occurred only two years after a centuries-old Chinese temple was nearly destroyed by fire and reduced to a heap of ashes.
In 2023, a fire destroyed the Shandan Great Buddha Temple in Shandan County, Gansu province, destroying a huge Buddha statue.
The surrounding structures had been destroyed, but the statue seemed to be mostly intact and the fire had been properly extinguished.
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