Qinfeng Pagoda is located on the west bank of the Shangshupu River,Qiandeng town (the original Qiandun town) Kunshan, Suzhou, Jiangsu Province, China. In 2013 it is listed as national key cultural relics protection site.
On the second year of the Reign of Tianjian in State of Liang in the Southern and Northern Dynasty Period (503), Wangshu a villager of the place donate his house and monk named Congyi started the construction on the mountain, and built Boruo temple. On the first year of Dazhongxiangfu Reign of Northern Song dynasty (1008), Zhao Heng, the emperor Zhenzong, ordered the templet to change its name to Yanfu Buddhist Temple, and rebuilt the Qinfeng Pagoda. According to the remaining brick inscriptions of the Song Dynasty, the pagoda was also called Buddha stupa. During the Reign of Wanli of Ming Dynasty, the wall of pagoda was reinforced by laying one layer of brick wall outside the original one, which brought some changes to the body of the pagoda, but still kept the Song Dynasty style.
Qinfeng pagoda is a pavilion type tower with brick body and wooden eaves, rectangular and seven-story. The bottom side is 4.88 meters long and the pagoda is 3 9.5 meters in full height. The iron casting steeple is 7 meters high, in slim shape and with meticulous workmanship. When reconstruction is started in the Song Dynasty, people laid the original big square bricks in the base of the tower and embedded the 44 Buddha statue bricks donated by the devout believers and worshipers on the outer wall of each story of the pagoda, which are now mostly kept in good condition.
In the first year of Reign of Tongzhi Emperor of Qing Dynasty(1862),Qinfeng Pagoda was severely ruined by the war, with the only the brick tower body remained, and after that was in a state of disrepair for many years. In 1950, it has been dilapidated. After several repairs and reinforcement, especially another consolidation during 2006 and 2007, the Yanfu temple has gradually restored.