The Wencheng Princess Temple is not big, but it is particularly sacred and wonderful! Wencheng Princess Temple is also known as the Great Day Rulai Buddha Hall, built in the Tang Dynasty, and has a history of more than 1,300 years. It is located in Benagou, Batang Township, Jieshu County, Yushu Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, 20 kilometers away from Jiegu Town and 838 kilometers away from Xining. It is one of the important cultural relics of Tangyu Ancient Road, and is a key national cultural relics protection unit. Wencheng Princess Temple sits north and south, facing the stream, built on the cliff, and is cleverly designed. There is a stone stone next to the temple gate, which records the history of the construction of Wencheng Princess Temple. The rock wall above the temple is chiselled with nine statues of relief Buddhas. The main Buddha statue in the middle is the Buddha statue of the Great Day. The Buddha statue is7.3 meters high, with a lifelike appearance and dignified and kind. Wencheng Princess Temple is on the banks of the Tongtian River, about 20 kilometers south of the Lithium Town, Yushu County, Qinghai Province. The Tibetans of the Tang Dynasty were built to commemorate the Princess Wencheng. This is a Tibetan flat-top building, 9 meters high, about 10 meters long and wide. In the temple, there are relief stone statues of Princess Wencheng, chiselled by the mountain, like sitting cross-legged, 8 meters high, and there are 8 relief ladies (in fact, eight Bodhisattvas) on both sides of the two-story line. Princess Wencheng and the maid are exquisitely carved, simple and vivid, dignified, reflecting the superb level of Tang Dynasty carving technology. There are two portraits of living Buddha on both sides of the walls, and there are also murals on the opposite wall of the statue with bamboo rafts, pomegranates, cotton, treasure mirrors and steamed buns, recording the story of Princess Wencheng teaching the local Tibetan people to cultivate and textile. The temple faces the stream and leans against the mountains, hidden between the pine and cypress, and is a place for Tibetan Buddhists and tourists at home and abroad to worship and visit.