Three Pagodas of Chongsheng Temple 崇圣寺三塔
The iconic symbol of Dali: three white pagodas dating to the 9th century, the tallest reaching 69 metres. Built during the Nanzhao Kingdom, they survived earthquakes that destroyed the temple behind them. The central pagoda's 16 tiers contain Buddhist relics and bronze mirrors that reflect Erhai Lake at dawn.
Erhai Lake 洱海
A 250-km² alpine lake at 1,972 metres elevation, ringed by Bai fishing villages, swallowtail-roofed farmhouses, and temple-crowned headlands. Cycling the 130-km circumference reveals a different Dali at every turn — cormorant fishermen at dawn, women washing indigo cloth at noon, pagoda silhouettes at sunset.
Dali Ancient City 大理古城
Rebuilt in Ming dynasty style on Nanzhao-era foundations, the old city's grid of flagstone streets is framed by Cangshan peaks to the west and Erhai Lake to the east. The Bai-style architecture — whitewashed walls with ink-wash landscape murals, upturned eaves, and carved wooden screens — creates a cityscape unique in China.
Cultural Highlights
🍜 Signature Dish: Bai Three-Course Tea (白族三道茶) — A Bai hospitality ritual: the first cup is bitter (symbolizing hardship), the second sweet (success), and the third bittersweet (reflection). Each cup uses different ingredients — pure tea, walnut-sesame-honey, and Sichuan pepper-ginger. A philosophy of life in three sips.
🎨 Artifact: Bai Tie-Dye (Zharan) (白族扎染) — Zhoucheng village near Dali is the center of China's finest tie-dye tradition. Bai artisans fold, pinch, and bind white cotton before immersion in indigo vats, creating intricate patterns of butterflies, flowers, and geometric designs. The technique is over 1,000 years old and UNESCO recognized.
🎵 Music: Bai Raosanling Festival Songs (白族绕三灵歌舞) — During the annual Raosanling pilgrimage, thousands of Bai villagers dance and sing for three days between three sacred sites around Erhai Lake. The songs — improvised love poetry set to ancient melodies — are UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage.