Baita Temple, also known as Baita Temple, was built in the Yuan Dynasty, has a history of more than 750 years, is one of the four temples of Liangzhou Tibetan Buddhism (Baita Temple, Lianhuashan Temple, Haizang Temple, Jinta Temple), located in Wunan Town, 20 kilometers southeast of Wuwei City, Gansu Province. In 1247 AD, Sagar Banzhida Gongxuanjianzan (saban for short) a religious leader of the Tibetan Sagar sect, and the Mongolian Khanate emperor and commander of the West Road Army Kuo Duan held the famous "Liangzhou Talks" at Wuwei White Pagoda Temple to solve the problem of Tibetan conversion, and reached the conditions for Tibet's conversion to the Mongolian Khanate. The "Book of Sagaban Zhida to the Tatars" was promulgated, ending the chaos in Tibet for nearly 400 years. The Baita Temple has thus become a historical witness to Tibet's official inclusion in the Chinese map. The existing Baita Temple is composed of monasteries, tower courtyards, and Tallinn buildings. The monastery has a wall, 420 meters from east to west, 430 meters from north to south,3.1 meters wide on the wall,26.75 meters long on the edge,5.1 meters high on the residual height. There are 4 city gates and 8 piers.