Qing'an Temple
1 media/Garnot-Kelung_B_QingAn_Circle_thumb.jpg 2020-08-19T22:34:29-04:00 Evan Dawley 7a40080bd5bb656cee837d5befaa3ea8e7a2ac44 35 9 With the French map drawn in 1885 as a base, this image shows the location of just the Qing'an Temple in 1895, represented with a red circle. Source: Reed Digital Collections, https://rdc.reed.edu/c/formosa/s/r?_pp=20&s=b9eb6c40c6e8102cdf471061f7a711dfe8ab14ff&p=18&pp=1. plain 2021-06-18T20:11:57-04:00 25.12962, 121.74077 1895 Formosa, Reed Digital Collections, https://rdc.reed.edu/c/formosa/s/r?_pp=20&s=b9eb6c40c6e8102cdf471061f7a711dfe8ab14ff&p=18&pp=1. Garnot, Eugene Germain (1857-1925) Copyright undetermined (http://rightsstatements.org/page/UND/1.0/?language=en). Evan N. Dawley SG-0006 Print materal Kate McDonald 306bb1134bc892ab2ada669bed7aecb100ef7d5fThis page is referenced by:
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2019-11-18T17:21:25-05:00
The Qing'an Temple: History
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This page provides the background history of the Qing'an Temple and its patron deity, Mazu.
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2021-10-04T12:19:40-04:00
25.12962, 121.74077
Jilong
pre-1895
Evan N. Dawley, Becoming Taiwanese
Evan N. Dawley
Qing'an Temple
Mazu
Chaotian Temple
Of the three main temples, the Qing'an gong is the oldest by far. When people from Zhangzhou County began to settle in the Jilong region in the late 18th century, they established a small temple to Mazu in the hills to the west of the harbor, at least according to one account. Although the early Chinese settlers of Taiwan famously and often violently divided themselves by native-place loyalties, particularly between those from Quanzhou and Zhangzhou, one thing that they all agreed upon was the importance of Mazu, a deity with special connections to sea-faring peoples like those of China's southeastern coast. As the numbers of Zhangzhou residents increased, and they congregated on the flat lands just south of the harbor, local leaders moved the Mazu temple to its present location and gave it the name of the Qing'an Temple. Existing sources reveal little about the temple's early history, much like that of the town in which it was built, and do not reveal its position within the network of Mazu temples Chinese settlers established across Taiwan. Chinese societies organize their temples in hierarchies of parent and branch temples, connecting them with a ritual of “dividing incense” (fenxiang), through which parishioners establish a new branch by carrying incense from the parent temple, to which pilgrims return during important festivals to renew the connection by burning incense. The Qing'an was likely a part of the network centered on Beigang's Chaotian Temple, the most important Mazu temple in Taiwan. Regardless of its institutional heritage, the Qing'an Temple quickly became the most important sacred space in Qing-era Jilong.