
TheTiantishan Caves (Chinese:天梯山石窟;pinyin:Tiāntīshān shíkū) are a series ofrock cutBuddhist cave temples in theLiangzhou District ofWuwei,Gansu, northwestChina. Excavated from the eastern cliffs of the Huangyang River (黃羊河) in theQilian Mountains from the time of theNorthern Liang, carving, decoration and subsequent modification of the caves continued through theNorthern Wei andTang to theQing dynasty.[1] The complex is identified with the Liangzhou Caves opened during the time ofJuqu Mengxun "one hundredli to the south ofLiangzhou", as recorded in theSpring and Autumn Annals of the Sixteen Kingdoms andFayuan Zhulin.[1][2] The name Tiantishan consists of threeChinese characters (天梯山) that literally translate as "Ladder to Heaven Mountain".[3]
TheTang monkDaoxuan in hisJi shenzhou sanbao gantong lu ascribes the opening of Tiantishan to theXiongnu king ofNorthern LiangJuqu Mengxun's devotion to "meritorious deeds" alongside his desire to avoid theimpermanence of the city by fashioning caves from the mountains.[4] Contrary to the account in theWei Shu of monks and Buddhist teachers relocating to the east after the conquest of theNorthern Liang by theNorthern Wei and subsequent persecution, structural, iconographic, and stylistic analysis shows that activity at the site continued.[2][4] A total of nineteen caves in three tiers have been identified:[2]
| Cave | Construction | Modifications | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cave 1 | Northern Liang | Northern Wei,Tang (beginning, early, mid, and late),Western Xia,Yuan,Ming,Qing | central pillar |
| Cave 2 | beginning of theTang | earlyTang,Western Xia,Ming | square |
| Cave 3 | beginning of theTang | Western Xia,Ming | square |
| Cave 4 | Northern Liang | Northern Wei,Tang (early and mid),Western Xia,Yuan,Ming,Qing | central pillar |
| Cave 5 | uncertain | uncertain | |
| Cave 6 | uncertain | Tang,Ming,Qing | square |
| Cave 7 | Northern Wei | Northern Zhou,Western Xia,Yuan,Ming | square |
| Cave 8 | Northern Wei | Northern Zhou,Sui,Tang (early and mid),Song,Ming | square |
| Cave 9 | Tang | Ming | square |
| Cave 10 | uncertain | uncertain | |
| Cave 11 | uncertain | uncertain | |
| Cave 12 | uncertain | uncertain | |
| Cave 13 | Tang | Western Xia,Yuan,Ming,Qing | |
| Cave 14 | Tang | Western Xia,Yuan,Ming | |
| Cave 15 | Northern Liang toNorthern Wei | Western Xia,Yuan,Ming | |
| Cave 16 | Northern Wei | Western Xia,Yuan | |
| Cave 17 | Northern Liang toNorthern Wei | Sui,Tang (mid),Western Xia,Yuan,Ming | |
| Cave 18 | Northern Liang | Northern Wei,Tang (late),Western Xia,Yuan,Ming,Qing | central pillar |
| Cave 19 | uncertain | uncertain | square |

Tiantishan disappeared from the historical record after theTang dynasty.[2] While decoration and modification of the caves continued into theQing dynasty, five suffered from collapse over the centuries, exacerbated by an earthquake in 1927.[2] Despite initial survey in the early 1950s demonstrating the importance of the site, in April 1959 the Gansu provincial government approved the construction of a reservoir that would flood two of the three tiers of caves when commissioned in May the following year.[2] In the interval, a research team from theDunhuang Academy andGansu Provincial Museum documented the site and excavated the collapsed caves, although all the written records and colour photographs and most of the black-and-white photographs have since been lost, along with most of the copies of the wall paintings.[2] Some 50 square metres (540 sq ft) of the paintings weredetached, although the colours have since "faded after 40 years of natural weathering", and other than for the largest, most of the sculptures were taken down and removed to the Museum.[2] In 2001, in recognition of theirsignificance as one of the earliestBuddhist grotto sites in the country, the Tiantishan Caves were designated aMajor Historical and Cultural Site Protected at the National Level bySACH.[5]
37°33′44″N102°44′41″E / 37.562135°N 102.744635°E /37.562135; 102.744635