Wanshou Temple is located in the Daochang Mountain, five kilometers south of Huzhou City, Zhejiang Province. Zen Master Rune, a monk from the Tang Dynasty, came here to open the mountain. According to legend, Zen Master Rune once lived in a cave with a tiger, so he was revered as the "Patriarch of Fuhu". The temple was first built in the Zhonghe period of Emperor Xizong of the Tang Dynasty (881-884), and its original name cannot be verified. During the Wu and Yue Dynasties of the Five Dynasties (895-978), it was once known as "Wuxing Zhengzhen Zen Temple" and was renamed "Miaojue Temple" in the Northern Song Dynasty. In the late Ming Dynasty, the temple was renovated and the temple was enlarged. During the Xianfeng period of the Qing Dynasty (1851-1861), Hongyang burned a torch. Only the Guanyin Hall survived, and the rest were reduced to scorched earth. In the third year of the reign of Emperor Guangxu (1877), the monk Fa Qing came to the mountain and worked hard for more than thirty years. The scale of the temple was complete, the ancient temple was resplendent, and the scholars and common people looked up to it. It was extremely prosperous for a while.