轮播图结束

上海钦赐仰殿 道教庙宇。在上海市浦东大道六号桥南沈家弄与源深路的交岔路口。又名东岳行宫。始建年代不详。传为三国时期东吴孙权为其母年建,清乾隆三十五年( 1770)重建,后屡毁屡建,极盛时前为东岳庙,后为三清大殿,左右十五殿,道舍配房二十余间,占地二十多亩,是上海道教胜地。文革期间,殿宇惨遭破坏,面目全非。现有建筑均为近年所建,前建山门,中有大殿,内奉东岳大帝神像,后为三清大殿,东西各建厢房二十余楹,四季游人香客络绎不绝,日夜蜡火通明,是上海著名的正一派道教殿宇,为市级重点开放道观。

Shanghai Qinci Yangdian Taoist temple. Located at the intersection of Shenjia Lane and Yuanshen Road, south of Bridge No. 6 on Pudong Avenue, Shanghai. Also known as the Dongyue Palace. The year of construction is unknown. It is said to have been built by Sun Quan of the Eastern Wu Kingdom for his mother during the Three Kingdoms period. It was rebuilt in the 35th year of the Qianlong reign (1770) of the Qing Dynasty, and was repeatedly destroyed and rebuilt. At its peak, it was formerly the Dongyue Temple, and later the Sanqing Hall, with 15 halls on the left and right, more than 20 rooms for Taoist priests, and an area of more than 20 acres. It was a Taoist attraction in Shanghai. During the Cultural Revolution, the temple was tragically destroyed and completely changed. The existing buildings were all built in recent years. The front is the gate, the middle is the main hall, which enshrines the statue of the Great Emperor of the East, and the back is the Hall of the Three Pristine Ones. There are more than 20 rooms on the east and west sides. Tourists and pilgrims come in an endless stream throughout the four seasons. It is brightly lit day and night. It is a famous Zhengyi school Taoist temple in Shanghai and a municipal key open Taoist temple.