Where in the country are there nunneries?

1. Mount Wutai

Pushou Temple, the largest Taoist temple in China, is located at the northern end of Taihuai Town, Mount Wutai. There are ordinary classes, intermediate classes, advanced classes, research classes and international classes. The courses include Buddhist scriptures, laws and theories, focusing on precepts. There are also auxiliary courses such as policies and regulations, ancient Chinese, calligraphy, English and computers.

2. Lianxi Temple

Located on Panlong Mountain about two kilometers south of Wuchang Ting Bridge, it is one of the four major Buddhist jungles in Wuhan and the only Buddhist temple in Wuhan. "The Jungle of Women." Lianxi Temple was founded in the late Yuan and early Ming Dynasties. The current Lianxi Temple faces south and covers an area of ??about 12,000 square meters. Most of the remaining main buildings were built in the Yuan and Ming Dynasties.

3. Jizhao Nunnery

Located at the southern foot of Shengying Peak in Cangshan Mountain, Dali, Yunnan Province, it is the most beautiful nunnery in China and the most artistic temple in China. Pass, learn from silence." The temple was built in the early Ming Dynasty and later destroyed. Tang Jiyao presided over the reconstruction during the Republic of China.

Extended information:

The largest nunnery in China is Pushou Temple in Mount Wutai. It is located at the southern end of Dongzhuang Village, Taihuai Town, Wutai County, Shanxi Province. It was founded in the Northern Song Dynasty, around the 30th year of Guangxu's reign. After reconstruction four years ago (1908), it was dedicated to the Thirteenth Dalai Lama. In 1919, two masters, Rurui and Miaoyin, founded the Wutai Mountain Nuns College in China.

The newly built Pushou Temple faces north and south, covering an area of ??19,988 square meters. The temple is divided into east and west courtyards. The east courtyard is huge, with a very beautiful white marble archway in front. The lower floor is built of blue bricks, and the upper floor is a wooden building with a single eave, five ridges, and four corridors. There is a stone plaque with the words "Pushou Temple" embedded in the front of the mountain gate.