Part of China's long-running commemorative silver program of the 1980s and 1990s, this issue belongs to a series celebrating Chinese Buddhist art and architecture at a moment when the state was cautiously rehabilitating religious imagery following the Cultural Revolution's systematic destruction of temples, statues, and artifacts. The political calculation was explicit: tourism revenue and international collector markets justified state mints producing coins honoring traditions the same government had violently suppressed a generation earlier.
Part of China's long-running commemorative silver program of the 1980s and 1990s, this issue belongs to a series celebrating Chinese Buddhist art and architecture at a moment when the state was cautiously rehabilitating religious imagery following the Cultural Revolution's systematic destruction of temples, statues, and artifacts. The political calculation was explicit: tourism revenue and international collector markets justified state mints producing coins honoring traditions the same government had violently suppressed a generation earlier.