There are big statues—and then there"s the Leshan Giant Buddha. Carved into a riverside cliff at the confluence of the Min, Qingyi and Dadu Rivers in Sichuan, China, this statue is an ancient engineering marvel. Construction began in 713 CE under a monk named Hai Tong, who hoped that the Buddha"s presence would calm dangerous river currents that threatened passing boats. He was so devoted that when funding ran out, he reportedly gouged out his own eyes to prove his sincerity. Construction took roughly 90 years and was completed long after Hai Tong"s death. At 71 metres tall, it is the largest stone Buddha in the world. Its shoulders stretch about 28 metres wide, its ears measure nearly 7 metres long and each foot extends over 8 metres. Drainage channels built inside the statue protect it from erosion, helping explain its remarkable preservation for more than 12 centuries.
Leshan Giant Buddha, Sichuan, China
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Autumn equinox
-
Tomb of the Golden Pharaoh
-
Dunluce Castle, County Antrim, Northern Ireland
-
Aqueduct, Arkadia Park, Poland
-
Festivus
-
The 50th Toronto International Film Festival
-
Black bear cub emerges into spring
-
Trunks packed for road
-
Pollinator Week
-
World Turtle Day
-
Polar bear season in Manitoba
-
Rapa Valley in Sarek National Park, Sweden
-
Happy Thanksgiving!
-
Village of Santa Maddalena, Dolomites, Italy
-
Dusky eagle-owls, Pakistan
-
Cowichan Valley on Vancouver Island
-
A road not for the faint of heart
-
World Dolphin Day
-
Snowy owl near the Canadian Rockies
-
Least chipmunk, Kootenai National Forest, Montana, United States
-
Winter at Valley Forge
-
9,000-year-old handprints
-
Perseid meteor shower over Nevada
-
Shi Shi Beach, Olympic National Park, Washington, United States
-
Los Glaciares National Park, Patagonia, Argentina
-
Vancouver Coastal Sea wolves in the Great Bear Rainforest
-
The only island in Lake Tahoe
-
Fit for a fairytale
-
Gwalior Fort, Madhya Pradesh, India
-
Atlantic spotted dolphins
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

