Located on the eastern slope of Humming Sandy Mountain (Mingshashan)
southeast of Dunhuang County in Gansu Province, the Mogao Grottoes is one of the
three noted grottoes in China and also the largest, best preserved and richest
treasure house of Buddhist art in the world.
In AD 366, during the Eastern Jin Dynasty, a monk named Yue Seng chiseled
the first cave here. The endeavor continued through later dynasties, including
the Northern Wei (386-534), Western Wei (535-556), Northern Zhou (557-581), Sui
(581-618), Tang (618-907), Five Dynasties (907-960), Song (960-1279), Western
Xia (1038-1227) and Yuan (1279-1368), resulting in the fantastic group of caves
that can been seen today.
Today, 492 caves still stand, containing some 2,100 colored statues and
45,000 square meters of murals. These murals, if joined together, would cover a
length of 30 kilometers. The caves vary in size. The smallest one just allows a
head's space, while the largest one stretches from the foot to the top of the
mountain, having a height of over 40 meters. The colored statues also differ in
size, ranging from a few centimeters to 33 meters high, embodying the remarkable
imagination of their makers.
Despite years of erosion, the murals are still brightly colored, with clear
lines. Through pictures of different styles and schools drawn in different
historical periods, they tell Buddhist stories and ways as well as life in the
secular world. All these, plus a largest quantity of Buddhist sutras and relics
kept in the caves have provided valuable material for a study of ancient China's
politics, economy, and culture and arts, as well as its science and technology,
military affairs, and religion, documenting national history as well as cultural
exchanges between China and the world.
In 1987, UNESCO placed the Mogao Grottoes under the protection of the world
cultural heritage list.