Buddhist structure built to contain a relic or sutra (collection of recorded Buddhist dialogues and discourses). They are common in China, Japan, Korea, Myanmar (formerly Burma), and Tibet. Pagodas usually have three, five, or seven storeys, although Chinese pagodas may be up to 13 floors high. They are crowned by a tall spire, or
sorin. There is generally no room inside, so that a pagoda is essentially just a stack of roofs, not a functioning building. Deriving from the Indian
stupa, the pagoda came to resemble a Chinese watchtower; the shape also has symbolic meaning.
A Tibetan pagoda is known as a chorten, meaning funeral pyre.
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