The Sakyamuni Pagoda of Fogong Temple of Ying County, Shanxi province, China, is a wooden Chinese pagoda built in 1056, during the Khitan-led Liao Dynasty.
The pagoda is built by Emperor Daozong of Liao (Hongji) at the site of his grandmother's family home, located eighty-five kilometers (fifty-three miles) south of the Liao Dynasty capital at Datong.
The pagoda, which will survive several large earthquakes throughout the centuries, is to attain such a level of fame within China that it will be given the generic nickname of the "Muta" (literally "Timber Pagoda").
The pagoda stands on a four meter (thirteen feet) tall stone platform, has a ten meter (thirty-three feet) tall steeple, and reaches a total height of 67.31 m (220.83 ft); it is the oldest existent fully wooden pagoda still standing in China.
(The oldest existent pagoda is the sixth century Songyue Pagoda (made of brick); the oldest existent wooden buildings in China are the Buddhist temple halls found at Mount Wutai, which date back to the mid Tang Dynasty (618–907)).
The pagoda features fifty-four different kinds of bracket arms in its construction, the greatest amount for any Liao Dynasty structure.
Between each outer story of the pagoda is a mezzanine layer where the bracket arms are located on the exterior.
From the exterior, the pagoda seems to have only five stories and two sets of rooftop eaves for the first story, yet the pagoda's interior reveals that it has nine stories in all.
The four hidden stories can be indicated from the exterior by the pagoda's pingzuo (terrace balconies).
A ring of columns support the lowest outstretching eaved roof on the base floor, while the pagoda also features interior support columns.
A statue of the Buddha Sakyamuni sits prominently in the center of the first floor of the pagoda, with an ornate zaojing (caisson) above its head (the pagoda is named Sakyamuni Pagoda due to this statue).
A zaojing is also carved into the ceiling of every story of the pagoda.
The windows on the eight sides of the pagoda provide views of the countryside, including Mount Heng and the Songgan River.
On a clear day, the pagoda can be seen from a distance of thirty kilometers (nineteen miles).