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The main buildings of the Genghis Khan Temple

Genghis Khan Temple is shaped like a "mountain" from the front, with a tall main hall in the middle. In the middle of the "mountain" is a 28-meter-high main hall. The left and right sides are connected to two side wings slightly smaller than the main hall. The temple has nine spiers, large and small, made of green glazed tiles and silver. There are sixteen garden-sized red lacquered tiles in the main hall, and the ceiling is decorated with ancient patterns. The floor of the entire hall is covered with patterned carpets. Set off by the four white walls, the entire hall looks majestic. A two-meter-high plaster statue of Genghis Khan stands in the center of the hall.

There is a blue rectangular plaque hanging in the center of the roof outside the main hall. On the plaque, "Temple of Genghis Khan" is written neatly in large golden characters in both Mongolian and Chinese characters. A stone wall one meter wide and one and a half meters high is built around the main hall. In the center of the south wall is a tall mountain gate with a green glazed tile roof. The two gates are vermilion, with large golden mushroom-shaped copper nails nailed on the doors, shining in the sun.

The east and west ends of the side hall next to the main hall are symmetrical, 16.62 meters high, and the tops are all round spires. The east and west side halls have statues of Kublai Khan and Temur Khan respectively. The two side halls display replicas of weapons, clothing, porcelain and other items from the Yuan Dynasty. Proverbs refer to advice, exhortation, warning language and reminders. The Proverbs Corridor is about 4 meters wide and nearly 50 meters long. Genghis Khan, a generation of genius, left many famous sayings and aphorisms throughout his military life, involving politics, military, education and many other fields. After being compiled by later generations, 55 of them with 1,738 words have been collected. By 2002, it was engraved in the corridor in cursive, running, official, seal, regular script and other scripts. These immortal mottos that shine with the wisdom of the Mongolian nation and have profound cultural heritage of the Mongolian Yuan Dynasty are publicly displayed for the public. Tourists appreciate and taste it.

There are dozens of marble stone tablets engraved with Genghis Khan's mottos erected in the corridor. The content of the tablets is in Mongolian and Chinese, with various calligraphy fonts. There are sayings: "If you know your own shortcomings, ask others, and if you know the mistakes in running the country, learn from the wise." "Don't decorate yourself with gold, silver, and jewelry, but enrich yourself with moral talents." He who leads ten men in battle can entrust thousands of men to fight, and he will lead thousands of men to fight." "As long as you brothers help each other and support each other resolutely, your enemies will never be able to defeat you, no matter how powerful they are." "Born to be golden. Those who cultivate themselves without learning will waste their lives; although people are smart and wise, their knowledge will eventually be exhausted, but they will be especially smart if they can study diligently." "Stupid people who study will eventually surpass those who are born smart." Residents should be as docile as calves in peacetime, and in wartime they should be like hungry eagles that pounce on wild birds." "Resent others for making a fortune but destroying their own God of Wealth." "It is better to do something serious than to talk empty words." etc. . The Tianjiao sculpture reflects Genghis Khan's majestic posture on the battlefield. The base is based on granite, symbolizing Genghis Khan's indestructible will and ambition. The upper part of the sculpture is made of bronze, symbolizing Genghis Khan's war journey.

The white marble sculpture of "The Divine Horse and the White Horse": This horse that Genghis Khan enthroned is no ordinary ride. According to legend, it is the incarnation of the Jade Emperor's Pegasus and the Divine Horse. Genghis Khan regarded it as invincible, invincible, and brave. , a symbol of good luck and good luck. Genghis Khan's full-body seated gold-plated sculpture is 2.8 meters tall and weighs 2.6 tons. It was created by Professor Shi Yi from the Sculpture Department of the Central Academy of Fine Arts and cast by the Institute of Beijing Mechanical and Electrical Research Institute. The overall shape highlights Genghis Khan's might, strength and depth. The heroic appearance of a generation of genius who combines wisdom, civility and martial arts. Sculptures of Genghis Khan's four queens (to be exact, there should be six queens, as well as Gu'erbiesu and Heda'an not included in the painting). These four queens are Bortie, Hulan, Yesu and Yesu. Dry.

Statue of the four sons of Genghis Khan: The four statues in the palace are from west to east, namely the eldest son Shuchi, the second son Chagatai, the third son Ogedai and the fourth son Tuo Lei. They were all born to Queen Bortie.