The Tiger Hill Pagoda is the primary pagoda of the former
Yunyan Temple, which was founded in 327 and rebuilt for the last time in 1871 after the
Taiping Rebellion. The temple suffered damage in successive wars and most of the temple was destroyed during the
Second Sino-Japanese War and
Chinese Civil War, after which it was abandoned. Some elements of the temple such as the formal entrance, the pagoda, and several other buildings and smaller shrines have survived, and now stand as landmarks throughout Tiger Hill Park. Construction of the pagoda began in 907 during the
Five Dynasties interregnum between the
Tang and
Song dynasties. At the time, Suzhou was ruled by the avidly Buddhist
kings of
Wuyue, based in
Hangzhou. Construction was completed in 961, after the absorption of Wuyue into the
Song Empire. The uppermost stories of the pagoda were built as an addition during the reign of the
Chongzhen Emperor (1628–1644), the last emperor of the
Ming. ==Description==