In 652 C.E., a Buddhist monk fresh from one of history’s most extraordinary journeys stood in the imperial capital of Chang’an and faced a practical problem: where to safely keep the hundreds of Sanskrit scriptures he had carried thousands of miles home from India. His solution was to build a tower. That tower still stands today.
Key facts
- Giant Wild Goose Pagoda: Constructed in 652 C.E. at the Daci’en Temple in Chang’an — modern-day Xi’an, Shaanxi, China — the pagoda was commissioned by the scholar-monk Xuanzang to house Sanskrit scriptures and Buddhist figurines he brought back from India.
- Tang dynasty architecture: The original five-story rammed-earth and brick structure stood roughly 60 meters tall; it was later rebuilt by Empress Wu Zetian in 704 C.E. as a seven-story square pavilion-style tower, the basic form still recognizable today.
- Silk Road World Heritage Site: In 2014 C.E., the pagoda was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List as part of the “Silk Roads: the Routes Network of Chang’an-Tianshan Corridor,” formally recognizing its role as a node in the ancient exchange network connecting East Asia, Central Asia, and beyond.
Xuanzang and the journey that made a pagoda necessary
Xuanzang left Chang’an in 629 C.E. without imperial permission, traveling overland through Central Asia and across the Hindu Kush mountains to reach India. He studied at the great Buddhist university of Nalanda, mastered Sanskrit, and debated scholars across the subcontinent. When he returned in 645 C.E., he brought back 657 Buddhist texts — more than any single traveler had carried before.
Emperor Taizong, initially skeptical of the unauthorized trip, received him warmly and invited him to write a detailed account of everything he had seen. That account, Great Tang Records on the Western Regions, would become one of the most important geographical and cultural documents of the medieval world, still used by historians and archaeologists today.
But the scriptures needed a home. Xuanzang petitioned to build a stone pagoda in the Indian style. What was actually constructed used rammed earth with a brick exterior — a compromise between his vision and local building tradition. Xuanzang supervised the work himself. The pagoda took two years to complete.
A structure shaped by centuries
The original 652 C.E. tower did not survive intact. Within decades, weeds growing through the brick seams had weakened it structurally. Empress Wu Zetian — the only woman in Chinese history to rule as emperor in her own name — ordered it demolished and rebuilt. The reconstructed seven-story tower was expanded to ten stories during the Dali period, then reduced again by war, then repaired again during the Five Dynasties period (930–933 C.E.) into the form that persists today.
A catastrophic earthquake in 1556 C.E., one of the deadliest in recorded history, struck Shaanxi province and reduced the pagoda by three stories. The Ming dynasty had already undertaken extensive renovations; after the earthquake, the structure was repaired and a 60-centimeter-thick outer layer of brick cladding was added around the original Tang dynasty core. That layering — Tang inside, Ming outside — means the building visitors walk through today is genuinely ancient at its heart.
The pagoda leans perceptibly to the west, a tilt that accelerated during the Qing dynasty and reached about one meter of displacement by 1996 C.E. Stabilization efforts since then have slowed the lean, though it remains visible to the naked eye.
What the pagoda preserved
The building’s primary function was archival. Xuanzang and his team of translators worked for nearly two decades converting Sanskrit texts into Chinese, producing translations that shaped East Asian Buddhism for centuries. The pagoda housed both the originals and the translated copies. It was, in effect, one of the most significant libraries of the 7th century C.E.
Inside the first floor, stone tablets bear inscriptions written by two Tang emperors — Taizong and Gaozong — in honor of Xuanzang’s translations. The calligraphy was carved by Chu Suiliang, one of the greatest calligraphers of the Tang dynasty. The interior walls feature engraved Buddha statues attributed to the artist Yan Liben, celebrated across Tang cultural history. Walking through the structure today means moving through multiple layers of Chinese artistic achievement compressed into one place.
The pagoda also sits within the Daci’en Temple complex, built in 648 C.E. to honor Empress Zhangsun. The temple draws millions of visitors annually and remains an active site of Buddhist practice and cultural tourism, accessible via the Xi’an Metro.
Lasting impact
The Giant Wild Goose Pagoda’s most durable contribution may be intellectual. The translations Xuanzang produced at Daci’en Temple introduced Indian philosophical and medical ideas into Chinese intellectual life at scale. His geographical account of Central Asia and South Asia provided detailed records of kingdoms, trade routes, and peoples that would otherwise be almost entirely lost — records that modern archaeologists have used to locate and identify sites across the region.
The pagoda also became a model. Its square pavilion-style brick architecture influenced pagoda construction across East Asia. And its connection to the Silk Road — as both a repository of knowledge carried along those routes and a landmark in the Tang capital where those routes terminated — gave it a symbolic weight that outlasted the dynasty itself.
The 2014 C.E. UNESCO designation recognized what Chinese scholars had long understood: this was not simply a religious building but a physical record of cultural exchange across half of the ancient world.
Blindspots and limits
The historical record of the pagoda’s construction comes primarily from Chinese imperial and Buddhist sources, which naturally centered the perspectives of the court and the monastery. The workers who built and repeatedly rebuilt the structure over fourteen centuries — their methods, origins, and working conditions — are almost entirely absent from the surviving texts. Xuanzang’s journey itself, while celebrated in Chinese sources, transformed the religious landscape of regions he passed through in ways that those regions’ own traditions recorded very differently, and those accounts are less often part of the standard telling.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Giant Wild Goose Pagoda
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous land rights recognized across 160 million hectares at COP30
- Ghana establishes marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- The Good News for Humankind archive on the medieval era
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