King Shuk believed in Buddhism and invited Nipo and Kashmir artisans to make a rare Manjusri Bodhisattva statue in Shageer (where Dingri County is located today) on the border between China and Nepal. On the way back to the palace by car, it was blocked by a sacred stone Amomuga with magical legend. According to legend, the bodhisattva statue reads "Koga Koga" (meaning attached to or rooted in it), so King Shuk ordered the construction of a strange-looking temple around the sacred stone, and dedicated Manjusri statue on the sacred stone in the temple, which was the earliest building of Kejia Temple. During the reign of King Rudd, a throne with 30 lotus flowers was made with a lot of precious jewels and silver, and a large-scale opening ceremony was held for the temple to build a great scholar. When Hanka, the mother of Gongde, was in power, she helped the temple to make silver statues of King Kong and Guanyin. For the two ends of the lotus throne, the famous "three supreme" Kejia Temple was formed. Because the temple is located on the Peacock River, in order to prevent flood hazards, Tashi Dezan mobilized believers to build flood control dams when he was in power, which was the first in the Guge Dynasty. Later generations, King Guge and his descendants successively added Buddhist statues, scriptures, and silk offerings, repaired or built temples, and enriched them with cultural relics. In addition to those mentioned, there are also the Statue of King Tara, the bronze statue of Sakyamuni, Ganjul, the Tanjul Tripitaka, and the full set of "Gao Xun, the fifth ancestor of the Guge Dynasty", and it is said that there is also a very precious "pre-macro period".