Qiaomen Temple is located in Qiaomen Lane, the Hui people's settlement area south of Zhongshan Bridge. It is a multi-door unity mosque. It is one of the earliest six mosques in Lanzhou. It is now located at No. 277 Zhongshan Road, Lanzhou City. It is rumored to have been built in Minghongwu for five years (1372). There was a simple mosque in Qiaomen Lane (Street) in the Ming Dynasty. During the Qing Kangxi period (1662 ~ 1722), Liu Boyang, a local Muslim celebrity, donated 8 mu of the house, and his son Liu Jizong and his relatives gradually expanded the temple. After two generations of his father and son, it was expanded in Kangxi 61 years (1722), and the title is recorded in the period of the ridge of the temple. Qiaomen Temple sits west to east, the temple is composed of roll sheds, the temple, the back kiln hall and the cross-court, bathing room and other buildings. The entrance of the temple is high-hanging gold "mosque" vertical raft, which is a square-shaped square with four corners. The two gates are tall and thick. The eight-character walls on both sides of the door are beautifully carved flowers with water-milled blue bricks, open left and right, and stretch spectacularly. The temple of worship is deep in 5 14 feet, supported by only 4 columns, and the pillar base is based on drum-shaped ants. The hall is spacious and bright, can accommodate thousands of people at the same time. The center of the roof of the hall is a shuttle-shaped pattern of green glazed tiles, surrounded by green tiles. The roof is vertical ceramic bottles. The moths are all decorated with dragon buckets. The door of the hall is wide and narrow, and the depth is very thick. With different sights, the pattern of the hall shows different shapes. The back of the hall is the kiln hall, which is square and decorated with a bucket arch and carved curved cover. The south side of the hall is a cross-court, with 5 lofts for the lecture hall. The bath room is located on the south side of the roll shed. The architectural art of the temple is characterized by the use of heavy scales in the hall, the back kiln hall and the front roll shed, and the tall and gorgeous, which is rare in ancient buildings in China.
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Qiaomen Temple is located in Qiaomen Lane, the Hui people's settlement area south of Zhongshan Bridge. It is a multi-door unity mosque. It is one of the earliest six mosques in Lanzhou. It is now located at No. 277 Zhongshan Road, Lanzhou City. It is rumored to have been built in Minghongwu for five years (1372). There was a simple mosque in Qiaomen Lane (Street) in the Ming Dynasty. During the Qing Kangxi period (1662 ~ 1722), Liu Boyang, a local Muslim celebrity, donated 8 mu of the house, and his son Liu Jizong and his relatives gradually expanded the temple. After two generations of his father and son, it was expanded in Kangxi 61 years (1722), and the title is recorded in the period of the ridge of the temple. Qiaomen Temple sits west to east, the temple is composed of roll sheds, the temple, the back kiln hall and the cross-court, bathing room and other buildings. The entrance of the temple is high-hanging gold "mosque" vertical raft, which is a square-shaped square with four corners. The two gates are tall and thick. The eight-character walls on both sides of the door are beautifully carved flowers with water-milled blue bricks, open left and right, and stretch spectacularly. The temple of worship is deep in 5 14 feet, supported by only 4 columns, and the pillar base is based on drum-shaped ants. The hall is spacious and bright, can accommodate thousands of people at the same time. The center of the roof of the hall is a shuttle-shaped pattern of green glazed tiles, surrounded by green tiles. The roof is vertical ceramic bottles. The moths are all decorated with dragon buckets. The door of the hall is wide and narrow, and the depth is very thick. With different sights, the pattern of the hall shows different shapes. The back of the hall is the kiln hall, which is square and decorated with a bucket arch and carved curved cover. The south side of the hall is a cross-court, with 5 lofts for the lecture hall. The bath room is located on the south side of the roll shed. The architectural art of the temple is characterized by the use of heavy scales in the hall, the back kiln hall and the front roll shed, and the tall and gorgeous, which is rare in ancient buildings in China.
这个地方真的很不错,大家有时间去看看
风格混搭得很完美,中国古典建筑结合伊斯兰建筑完全没有违和感。
桥门寺坐落在中山桥以南的回民聚居区桥门巷内,是一个多门宦的团结清真寺,是兰州最早的六大清真寺之一,现位于兰州市中山路。 相传始建于明洪武五年(1372年),据传,早在明代桥门巷(街)即有一座简陋的清真寺。清康熙年间(1662年-1722年)由当地穆斯林名人刘伯阳捐宅地8亩,与其子刘继宗两代以及众教亲共同呕心沥血逐步将该寺扩建。经其父子两代苦心经营,于康熙六十一年(1722年)扩建而成,并题记落成年代于大殿的脊檩下。桥门寺坐西向东,全寺由卷棚、大殿,后窑殿及跨院、沐浴室等建筑物组成。 寺门口高悬烫金“清真寺”竖匾,为四角飞翘方形重檐,两扇大门高大厚实。门两侧八字墙为水磨青砖精雕的花卉,左右敞开,舒展壮观。礼拜大殿进深5间14檩,仅用4根立柱支撑,以鼓形蚂蚁石柱为柱基。殿内宽敞豁亮,可容千人同时礼拜。 大殿屋顶正中为绿色琉璃瓦组成的梭形图案,四周青瓦压顶。屋顶竖陶瓷宝瓶3只。飞檐全以龙斗装修。大殿之隔门棂条面阔甚窄,而进深甚厚,随着视线不同,檩条图案呈现不同形态。大殿后为窑殿,形体为正方形,装饰考究,并加斗拱及雕花弯罩。大殿南侧为跨院,有阁楼5间,为讲经堂。沐浴室设在卷棚南侧。 此寺建筑艺术的特点是大殿、后窑殿及前卷棚均使用重檐,且高大华丽,为国内古建筑中所罕见。
有兴趣可以前往看看,环境还不错,逛逛而已的地方。