During the final years of the
Tang dynasty, Buddhist monks who inhabited the place had established it into a sacred Buddhist temple. It used to have different names. The temple was dismantled during Yuan dynasty and reconverted into a Buddhist temple in Ming dynasty. In 1684, around the beginning of the
Qing dynasty, general
Shi Lang donated generously to rebuild and expanded the temple buildings, where a shrine hall for
Guanyin Bodhisattva was installed and worshipped. The general named the temple after the Buddhist sacred site
Mount Putuo of
Zhejiang Province, which is considered the abode of Guanyin. In 1924, Master Hui Quan was appointed the first abbot of the South Putuo Temple and he set up
Minnan Buddhist College in 1925. Several prominent scholarly monks like
Hong Yi and
Yin Shun taught in the college. The temple suffered much damages by the red guards during Cultural Revolution and was converted into a factory. The temple underwent further renovation in the 1980s and the first abbot after cultural revolution was elected in 1989. ==See also==