Leshan Travel Guide

Written by ivana Updated Oct. 13, 2021

Leshan (literally: "happy mountain"), formerly called Jiazhou, is located in the southwestern part of the Sichuan Basin in Sichuan Province.

Leshan City proper spans roughly 800sq km and has a population of roughly a half million. Thirty-three national minorities are represented in the region, the largest of them being the Li Nationality living principally in the Li Autonomous Counties of Mabian and E'bian, and in the Jinkouhe District of Leshan itself.

But what put Leshan on the map, as it were, is the mist-enshrouded Mt. Emei – one of Four Sacred Buddhist Mountains of China – and, of course, the Leshan Giant Buddha, carved into the cliff-side of Lingyun Mountain facing the waterway that represents the confluence of the Dadu, Ming and Qingyi Rivers.

The Mt Emei-Leshan Giant Buddha area (also known as the Mount Emei Scenic Area) is now a World Cultural Heritage Site as well as a Chinese Natural Heritage Site.

Tourist Attractions

For centuries, Mt. Emei and the Leshan Giant Budda have been revered by visitors from near and far for their intrinsic value as Buddist heritage sites. Lesser frequented but decidedly tour-worthy sights, mostly within an hour's drive, include Wutong Bridge, the scenic resort town of Wutongqiao on the shores of a small lake nicknamed "Minor West Lake", in deference to the much larger – and world-renowned – West Lake near Hangzhou City in Zhejiang Province, but also sights such as Lingyun Temple Museum (above Dafo, on Lingyun Mountain), Wuyou Si (Wuyou Temple) atop nearby Wuyou Mountain, the peculiar boat-shaped ancient town of Luocheng southeast of Leshan, Thousand Buddhas in Jiajiang, Niuyan Temple in Qingshen and Three-Su Ancestral Temple in Meishan, all north of Leshan, and Black Dragon Beach in Renshou County, near Meishan.

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