Port
Xiamen, China
Activity Level
Strenuous
Excursion Type
All
Wheelchair Accessible
No
Starting At
$109.95
Minimum Age
Information Not Currently Available
Duration
Approximately 7 Hours
Meals Included
Meals included
Quanzhou, situated on the southeastern coast of Fujian Province, was an important harbor on the Maritime Silk Road. In history, Buddhism, Christianity, Islam and Taoism were disseminated here, so Quanzhou is often called 'the museum of world religions'.
Your first stop in Quanzhou will be the Buddhist Kaiyuan Temple, dating back to AD 686. The temple has an airy, stone-paved courtyard flanked by the impressive East and West Pagoda surrounded by Buddhist niches of both Chinese and Indian design. The main hall contains five large, gilded Buddha statues and on the ceiling above them are peculiar flying apsaras—celestial beings similar to angels. During its heyday in the Song Dynasty, it is said that more than 1,000 monks lived in it.
At the Ancient Overseas Transportation History Museum, inside the temple, you will browse through China’s impressive and sophisticated ancient navigation history, including models and relics of Chinese ocean-going vessels of the time. The building, opened in 1991, boasts seven stories and is designed like a sailboat. The bilingual exhibits showcase China’s marvelous maritime achievements.
After a Chinese lunch at local hotel, take photos of the Qingjing Temple. Ranked one of the three oldest mosques in China, it has witnessed the history of the city for almost 1,000 years and is unique in Southeastern China for being of purely Middle Eastern in design. View some famous relics and architecture dating from the city’s golden era as the start-point of the Maritime Silk Road, and see the newly restored classical redbrick residences of South Fujian Province.
Stroll along Tumen Street, well known among local and foreign visitors as the commercial and cultural center of Quanzhou. Conclude this fascinating day out with a motor coach ride back to Xiamen.