Baosheng Temple, a famous Millennium Temple in the southern Yangtze River, has abundant Wall-Statue Arhats created by the Statue-Sage of Tang Dynasty, Huizhi Yang, in its Antiquities Museum according to legend. It was built in the second year of Liang Tianjian (AD503), dating back over 1,500 years of history. Baosheng Temple experienced several rises and falls in the past dynasties, of which there were more than 5000 rooms and thousands of monks across almost half the town at the height of the boom. Until the Chenghua years in the Ming Dynasty, the temple was still composed of more than 200 rooms and maintained the pattern of the first-class temples, known as one of the four temples in the southern Yangtze River. The existing buildings contain Two-Gate of Mountain, King Hall, Antiquities Museum, etc.
The northern of the King Hall is a courtyard, containing a couple of cultural relics: the Bluestone Carving of Jingchuang and Iron Bell. In 1932, the Arhat Hall of the Chinese-Western integrated style was designed by the architectural expert, Wenzhao Fan, and composed of the surviving nine Statues of Arhat placed by the sculptor Xiaohe Jiang and Tianyou Hua. Although the Statues of Arhat remains half and incomplete in the Antiquities Museum currently, they are still the gem of classical art. In 1961, Statues of Arhat in Baosheng Temple was listed as one of the first batch of the major historic and cultural sites under state protection.