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Introduction to the Six Harmonies Pagoda Information about the Six Harmonies Pagoda

1. Liuhe Pagoda, named after the Buddhist meaning of "Six Harmonies"; also known as Liuhe Pagoda, meaning "the four directions of heaven and earth"; located in Zhijiang, Xihu District, Hangzhou City, Zhejiang Province Road No. 16. It was first built in the third year of Kaibao in the Song Dynasty (970). The original site of the pagoda foundation was the South Orchard of Qian Hongchu, King of Wuyue. The pagoda built in Qian Hongchu's garden was originally to suppress the tide of the Yangtze River.

2. The Liuhe Pagoda covers an area of ??890 square meters (about 1.3 acres). There are 104 iron bells hanging on the eaves of each floor outside the tower. The Liuhe Pagoda is 59.89 meters high. The internal tower core is a masonry structure with seven floors. The external wooden structure, pavilion-style eaves, has eight sides and 13 floors. There are pot doors on both sides of each corridor. The interior of the tower is connected by spiral stairs. The third-level Xumizuo is carved with various patterns such as flowers, birds, animals, fairies and so on. Emperor Qianlong of the Qing Dynasty once inscribed inscriptions on each floor of the Liuhe Pagoda.

3. On March 4, 1961, the Six Harmonies Pagoda was announced by the State Council of the People's Republic of China as the first batch of national key cultural relics protection units.