Dazu
See also: dazu, dazu-, dàzú, däzu̱, and dąz̄ʉ́
English
Alternative forms
- (from Wade–Giles) Ta-tsu
Etymology
From the Hanyu Pinyin romanization of the Mandarin Chinese pronunciation for 大足 (Dàzú).
Proper noun
Dazu
- A district of Chongqing, China.
- [1973, Sullivan, Michael, “Sung Dynasty (960-1279)”, in Chinese Art: Recent Discoveries, →ISBN, OCLC 763137, OL 5473159M, page 31:
- A new chapter in the study of Chinese sculpture in the Sung Dynasty opened with the discovery of the Mai-chi-shan caves already referred to and the publication of a little-known sculptured cliff at Ta-tsu in Szechwan, dating chiefly from the Sung. The lively realism of the Ta-tsu high relief figures, some of which resemble the clay figures at Mai-chi-shan, others reminiscent of mediaeval European sculpture, is further proof that beside the courtly and scholarly arts for which the Sung is famous there flourished a vigorous school of popular Buddhist art of a very different character.]
- 1998, Brown, J. D., Frommer's China: The 50 Most Memorable Trips (Frommer's), →ISBN, OCLC 39522322, page 306:
- Emei Shan is one of Buddhism’s four sacred mountains, while Baoding Shan (Precious Mountain) at Dazu is one of China’s four great centers of Buddhist sculpture. These sacred carvings are located in Sichuan Province in western China, in Dazu District, about halfway between the cities of Chengdu and Chongqing.
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Translations
district
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