Ho Ann Kiong Temple

Chinese temple in Kuala Terengganu, Malaysia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ho Ann Kiong Temple (Malay: Tokong Ho Ann Kiong; Chinese: 护安宫) is a Chinese temple situated in Chinatown of Kuala Terengganu, Terengganu, Malaysia. It is the oldest Taoist temple in the state as part of the Chinatown.[2][3]

Quick facts Religion, Affiliation ...
Ho Ann Kiong Temple
Malay: Tokong Ho Ann Kiong
Chinese: 护安宫
Religion
AffiliationTaoism
DistrictKuala Terengganu District
DeityMazu
1801
Location
LocationKuala Terengganu
MunicipalityKuala Terengganu
StateTerengganu
CountryMalaysia
Interactive map of Ho Ann Kiong Temple
Coordinates5°19′57.803″N 103°7′58.285″E
Architecture
TypeChinese temple
Established1801[1]
Completed2012 (rebuilt)
Destroyed2010 (partial)
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Hanyu PinyinHù Ān Gōng
Hanyu PinyinHù Ān Gōng
Quick facts Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese ...
Ho Ann Kiong Temple
Traditional Chinese護安宮
Simplified Chinese护安宫
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinHù Ān Gōng
Wade–GilesHu⁴ An¹ Kung¹
Southern Min
Hokkien POJHō͘ An Kiong
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History

The temple was built in 1801 by early Chinese immigrants in Terengganu to fulfil their religious obligations. With the establishment of another temple known as Tian Hou Gong Temple in the area, the number of devotees slowly decreased and the building fell into disrepair.[1] A deadly epidemic then occurred in 1915 with half of the town population wiped out.[1] Suffering from a limited medical supplies at the time, the population immediately returned to praying in the temple to ask for mercy from the deities for cure.[1] Their appeal would be answered under a condition that the temple building should be repaired. The town population subsequently agreed to the condition and following the repair, the epidemic miraculously dissipated.[1]

In the week after Chinese New Year in 2010, half of the temple building was suddenly ravaged by fire.[4] Having learnt the lesson from the older town population, the newer generations immediately raised series of funds to repair and restore the damaged temple.[1] The temple was then fully restored in 2012 with a total cost of RM1.3 million.[5]

References

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