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Buddhist temples in Japan

Buddhist temples or monasteries are (along with Shinto shrines) the most numerous, famous, and important religious buildings in Japan.[note 1] The shogunates or leaders of Japan have made it a priority to update and rebuild Buddhist temples since the Momoyama period (late 16th century).[1] The Japanese word for a Buddhist monastery is tera () (kun reading), and the same kanji also has the pronunciation ji (on reading), so temple names frequently end in -dera or -ji. Another ending, -in (), is normally used to refer to minor temples. Examples of temple names that have these suffixes are Kiyomizu-dera, Enryaku-ji and Kōtoku-in.

Higashi Hongan-ji in Kyoto

Etymology edit

The Japanese word for a Buddhist temple, tera (), was anciently also written phonetically 天良, tera, and is cognate with the Modern Korean Chǒl from Middle Korean Tiel, the Jurchen Taira and the reconstructed Old Chinese *dɘiaʁ, all meaning "Buddhist monastery".[2] These words are apparently derived from the Aramaic word for "Monastery" dērā/ dairā/ dēr (from the root dwr "to live together"), rather than from the unrelated and later Indian word for monastery vihara, and may have been transmitted by the first Central Asian translators of Buddhist scriptures, such as An Shigao or Lokaksema.[2]

Buddhist and Shinto structures edit

 
A torii at the entrance of Shitennō-ji, a Buddhist temple in Osaka

In Japan, Buddhist temples co-exist with Shinto shrines and both share the basic features of Japanese traditional architecture.[3] Both torii and rōmon mark the entrance to a shrine, as well as to temples, although torii is associated with Shinto and rōmon with Buddhism. Some shrines, for example Iwashimizu Hachiman-gū, have a Buddhist-style main gate called sōmon. Many temples have a temizuya and komainu, like a shrine. Conversely, some shrines make use of incense or have a shōrō belltower. Others – for example, Tanzan Shrine in Nara – even have a pagoda.[4]

 
Honden of the Zennyo Ryūō shrine, inside a Shingon temple in Kyoto

Similarities between temples and shrines are also functional. Like a shrine, a Buddhist temple is not primarily a place of worship: its most important buildings are used for the safekeeping of sacred objects (the honzon, equivalent to a shrine's shintai) and are not accessible to worshipers.[3] Unlike a Christian church, a temple is also a monastery. There are specialized buildings for certain rites, but these are usually open only to a limited number of participants. Religious mass gatherings do not take place with regularity as with Christian religions and are in any event not held inside the temple. If many people are involved in a ceremony, it will assume a festive character and will be held outdoors.[3] The architectural elements of a Buddhist temple are meant to embody themes and teachings of Buddhism.

The reason for the great structural resemblances between the Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines lies in their common history. When Shintoism first encountered Buddhism it became more interpretive as it did not try to explain the universe as Buddhism sometimes tried to.[5] It is normal for a temple to have been also a shrine, and obvious architectural differences between the two are few, such that often only a specialist will notice them.[3] Many visitors to Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines go for similar reasons, such as prayer and for luck.[6] The two religions coexist due to increased popularity of religions and the birth of new religions.

Shrines enshrining local kami existed long before the arrival of Buddhism, but they consisted either of demarcated land areas with no building, or of temporary shrines, erected when needed.[7] With the arrival of Buddhism in Japan in the 6th century, shrines were subjected to its influence and adopted both the concept of permanent structures and the architecture of Buddhist temples.[7]

 
A Buddhist-style gate (karamon) at Iwashimizu Hachiman-gū

The successive development of shinbutsu-shūgō (syncretism of Buddhism and kami worship) and of the honji suijaku theory brought to the almost complete fusion of kami worship and Buddhism.[8] It became normal for shrines to be accompanied by temples in mixed complexes called jingū-ji (神宮寺, lit. shrine temple) or miyadera (宮寺, lit. shrine temple).[note 2] The opposite was also common: most temples had at least a small shrine dedicated to its tutelary kami and were therefore called jisha (寺社, temple shrines). The Meiji era eliminated most jingūji, but left jisha intact, such that even today most temples have at least one shrine, sometimes very large, on their premises, and the Buddhist goddess Benzaiten is often worshiped at Shinto shrines.[note 3][9]

As a consequence, for centuries shrines and temples had a symbiotic relationship where each influenced the other. Shrines took from Buddhism its gates (mon), the use of a hall for lay worshipers, the use of vermilion-colored wood and more, while Chinese Buddhist architecture was adapted to Japanese tastes with more asymmetrical layouts, greater use of natural materials, and an adaptation of the monastery to the pre-existing natural environment.[10]

The clear separation between Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines, which today is the norm, emerges only as a result of the shinbutsu bunri ("separation of kami and Buddhas") law of 1868. This separation was mandated by law, and many shrine-temples were forced to become just shrines, among them famous ones like Usa Hachiman-gū and Tsurugaoka Hachiman-gū.

Because mixing the two religions was now forbidden, jingūji had to give away some of their properties or dismantle some of their buildings, thus damaging the integrity of their cultural heritage and decreasing the historical and economic value of their properties.[11] For example, Tsurugaoka Hachiman-gū's giant Niō (the two wooden wardens usually found at the sides of a temple's entrance), being objects of Buddhist worship and therefore illegal where they were, were sold to Jufuku-ji, where they still are.[12] The shrine-temple also had to destroy Buddhism-related buildings, for example its tahōtō, its mi and its shichidō garan.[11]

Architecture edit

General features edit

 
The roof is the dominant feature of a Buddhist temple.

Buddhist architecture in Japan is not native, but imported from China and other Asian cultures over the centuries with such constancy that the building styles of all Six Dynasties are represented. Its history is, as a consequence, dominated by Chinese and other Asian techniques and styles (present even in Ise Shrine, held to be the quintessence of Japanese architecture) on one side, and by Japanese original variations on those themes on the other.[13]

Partly due also to the variety of climates in Japan and the millennium encompassed between the first cultural import and the last, the result is extremely heterogeneous, but several practically universal features can be found nonetheless. First of all is the choice of materials, always wood in various forms (planks, straw, tree bark, etc.) for almost all structures. Unlike both Western and some Chinese architecture, the use of stone is avoided except for certain specific uses, for example temple podia and pagoda foundations.[13]

The general structure is almost always the same: post and lintel support a large and gently curved roof, while the walls are paper-thin, often movable and in any case non-carrying. The post and lintel structure embodies the Axis Mundi of an iconic form of the Buddha that is typically represented in pagodas and Indian stupas. Arches and barrel roofs are completely absent. Gable and eave curves are gentler than in China and columnar entasis (convexity at the center) limited.[13]

The roof is the most visually impressive component, often constituting half the size of the whole edifice.[13] The slightly curved eaves extend far beyond the walls, covering verandas, and their weight must therefore be supported by complex bracket systems called tokyō. These oversize eaves give the interior a characteristic dimness, which contributes to the temple's atmosphere. The interior of the building normally consists of a single room at the center called moya, from which sometimes depart other less important spaces, for example corridors called hisashi.

Inner space divisions are fluid, and room size can be modified through the use of screens or movable paper walls. The large, single space offered by the main hall can therefore be altered according to the need.[13] The separation between inside and outside is itself in some measure not absolute as entire walls can be removed, opening the temple to visitors. Verandas appear to be part of the building to an outsider, but part of the external world to those in the temple. Structures are therefore made to a certain extent part of their environment. The use of construction modules keeps proportions between different parts of the edifice constant, preserving its overall harmony.[13] (On the subject of temple proportions, see also the article ken).

Even in cases as that of Nikkō Tōshō-gū, where every available space is heavily decorated, ornamentation tends to follow, and therefore emphasize rather than hide, basic structures.[13]

Being shared by both sacred and profane architecture, these architectonic features made it easy converting a lay building into a temple. This happened for example at Hōryū-ji, where a noblewoman's mansion was transformed into a religious building.

Buddhist architecture of the Heian Period consisted of the re-emergence of national tastes. The temple Hojoji represents paradise and the pure land, which embodies elements of Pure Land Buddhism. The last formal temple was Motsuji.[5]

Muroji is a temple complex found below the mountain of Mount Muro. The area behind the temple is sacred and is off limits to visitors and pilgrims. The caves of Mount Muro are especially sacred. The famous Dragon Cave is the thought to house the Dragon King who protects the country. This is an example of how natural elements are sacred aspects of Buddhist temples.[14]

Four great temples of the seventh century edit

There are four great temples of the seventh century: Asukadera, Kudara Odera, Kawaradera and Yakushiji.[15]

Asuka-Dera edit

This great hall had three golden halls and was the first full-scale temple. It was the most significant temple in the Asuka period.[15] The founder of Asukadera was Soga no Umako and he had built a smaller scaled residence similar to the great hall. Many royal palaces were built in this natural environment for centuries later.[15] When visited today it barely holds its grandeur it once had as there are no clear marks of where the original halls were and now the main scene is the parking lot with tour buses.

Kudara Odera edit

The foundation remains might be those of the remains found on the site of Kibi Pond (Kibi Ike). This grand temple had a nine-story pagoda that was constructed at the beginnings of Buddhism in Japan.[15]

Kawaradera edit

The excavations and reconstruction of Kawaradera help to understand what it originally looked like. The plan originally had two golden halls with a pagoda and then residential spaces for monks. It was in an asymmetrical arrangement that was new and very innovative for this time. Sources lack in the history of its construction and who commissioned it.[15]

Yakushiji edit

In the early eighth century this temple was constructed in Nara and has been reproduced into the original layout today. The monumental Yakushi triad exists here. The structure is in bright colors as it also would have originally been.[15]

History edit

 
Ichijō-ji's pagoda, an example of the wayō style

The architecture of Buddhist temples, as that of any structure, has changed and developed over the centuries. However, while the particular details may vary, the general themes and styles have strong similarities and common origins.

The already mentioned Hōryū-ji was one of the first Buddhist temples built in Japan. Its primary structures represent the style current in 6th century CE Sui dynasty China. The Kondō (Golden Hall) is a double-roofed structure, supported by thick, strong pillars, and giving a feeling of boldness and weight.

Most Buddhist temples in Japan belong to one of four main styles:

  • Wayō – A style developed in art and architecture in Japan during the Heian period by the esoteric sects Tendai and Shingon on the basis of contemporary Chinese architecture. So called to distinguish it from imported Chinese styles, in architecture it was characterized by simplicity, refraining from ornamentation, use of natural timber and in general plain materials.
  • Daibutsuyō – a Japanese religious architectural style that emerged in the late 12th or early 13th century on the basis of contemporary Chinese architecture. Introduced by priest Chōgen, this grandiose and monumental style was based on Song Dynasty architecture and was the antithesis of the simple and traditional wayō style. The Nandaimon at Tōdai-ji and the Amida Hall at Jōdo-ji are the only extant examples of this style.[16][17]
  • Zenshūyō – A style that takes its name from its creators, the Buddhist Zen sect, and which emerged in the late 12th or early 13th century on the basis of contemporary Chinese architecture. The zenshūyō was originally called karayō (唐様, Chinese style) but, like the Daibutsu style, was renamed by Ōta Hirotarō, a 20th-century scholar. Its characteristics are earthen floors, decorative curved pent roofs (mokoshi) and pronouncedly curved main roofs, cusped windows (katōmado) and paneled doors.[16][18] Typical of the style is also the main hall (Butsuden), which has just one story but seems to have two because it has a covered pent roof called mokoshi.
  • Setchūyō – an architectural style born in Japan during the Muromachi period from the fusion of elements from three preceding styles, the wayō, the daibutsuyō and zen'yō. It is exemplified by the main hall at Kakurin-ji.[18][19] The combination of wayō and daibutsuyō in particular became so frequent that sometimes it is classed separately by scholars under the name Shin-wayō (新和様, new wayō).[18]

Layout and geomantic positioning edit

 
Part of Tōshōdai-ji's garan (left to right, the kondō, the kōdō, the korō and the Raiō)

Buddhist temple complexes consist of a number of structures arranged according to certain concepts or guidelines.

The arrangement of the major buildings (garan haichi (伽藍配置)) changed over time. An early pattern had a gate, tower, kondō and kodō in a straight line from south to north. Corridors extended east and west from the flanks of the gate, then turned north, and finally joined north of the kōdo, forming a cloister around the pagoda and the major halls. This pattern, typified by Shitennō-ji in Osaka, came from China via Baekje; the Chinese style of Buddhist temples, though altered somewhat by China via Korean peninsula, ultimately was based on that of Chinese palaces, and this is evident in many of the basic design features that remain today in the temples of all three countries.

A Buddhist temple complex in Japan generally follows the pattern of a series of sacred spaces encircling a courtyard, and entered via a set of gates. These gates will typically have a pair of large guardian statues, called Niō.

In addition, many of the more important or powerful temples are built in locations that are favorable according to the precepts of Chinese geomancy. For example, Enryaku-ji, which sits atop Mount Hiei to the north-east of Kyoto, is said to defend the city from evil spirits by being placed in that direction. The arrangements of mountains and other geographic features in particular directions around the temple play important roles as well. This custom continued for a long time. Eight centuries after the founding of Enryaku-ji, the Tokugawa shogunate established Kan'ei-ji in a similar direction for the protection of their Edo Castle. Its mountain-name, Mount Tōei (東Tōei-zan), takes a character from Mount Hiei (比Hiei-zan), and can be interpreted as meaning "the Mount Hiei of the East."

Kamakura's Tsurugaoka Hachiman-gū is now only a Shinto shrine but, before the Shinto and Buddhism Separation Order (神仏判然令) of 1868, its name was Tsurugaoka Hachiman-gū-ji (鶴岡八幡宮寺, Tsurugaoka Hachiman Shrine Temple) and it was also a Buddhist temple, one of the oldest of the city.[20] The temple and the city were built with Feng Shui in mind.[21] The present location was carefully chosen as the most propitious after consulting a diviner because it had a mountain to the north (the Hokuzan (北山)), a river to the east (the Namerikawa) and a great road to the west (the Kotō Kaidō (古東街道)), and was open to the south (on Sagami Bay).[21] Each direction was protected by a god: Genbu guarded the north, Seiryū the east, Byakko the west and Suzaku the south.[21] The willows near the ponds and the catalpas next to the Museum of Modern Art represent respectively Seiryū and Byakko.[21]

Geomancy lost in importance during the Heian period as temple layout was adapted to the natural environment, disregarding feng shui.

In addition to geomantic considerations, Buddhist temples, like any other religious structures, need to be organized in order to best serve their various purposes. The most important space in any Buddhist temple complex is the sacred space where images of Buddhas and bodhisattvas are kept, and where important rituals are performed.

 
Hattō at Zuiryū-ji

These areas are always separated from those accessible to the lay worshipers, though the distance between the two and the manner of their separation is quite varied. In many temples, there is little more than a wooden railing dividing the sacred space with that of the laypeople, but in many others there is a significant distance, perhaps a graveled courtyard, between the two.

Another structure or space of great importance accommodates the physical day-to-day needs of the clergy. Spaces for eating, sleeping and studying are essential, particularly in those temples that serve as monasteries.

According to a 13th-century text,[22] "a garan is a temple with a kon-dō (main hall), a (pagoda), a kō-dō (lecture hall), a shōrō (belfry), a jiki-dō (refectory), a sōbō (monks' living quarters), and a kyōzō (scriptures deposit, library)."[23] These are the seven listed as shichidō elements of a Nanto Rokushū (南都六宗, Nara six sects)[24] temple.[25]

A 15th-century text[26] describes how Zen school temples (Sōtō (曹洞), Rinzai (臨済))[27] included a butsuden or butsu-dō (main hall), a hattō (lecture hall), a kuin (kitchen/office), a sō-dō (building dedicated to Zazen), a sanmon (main gate), a tōsu (toilet) and a yokushitsu (bath).

Common temple features edit

 
Buddhist temple of Kinkaku-ji, declared World Heritage Site by UNESCO.
  • Butsuden or Butsu-dō (仏殿・仏堂) – lit. "Hall of Buddha".
    • A Zen temple's main hall. Seems to have two stories, but has in fact only one and measures either 3×3 or 5×5 bays.
    • Any building enshrining the statue of Buddha or of a bodhisattva and dedicated to prayer.[25]
  • chinjusha (鎮守社/鎮主社) – a small shrine built at a Buddhist temple and dedicated to its tutelary kami.[25]
  • chōzuya (手水舎) – see temizuya.
  • chūmon (中門) – in a temple, the gate after the naindaimon connected to a kairō.[25] See also mon.
  • (堂) – Lit. hall. Suffix for the name of the buildings part of a temple. The prefix can be the name of a deity associated with it (e.g. Yakushi-dō, or Yakushi hall) or express the building's function within the temple's compound (e.g. hon-dō, or main hall). See also Butsu-dō, hō-dō, hon-dō, jiki-dō, kaisan-dō, kō-dō, kon-dō, kyō-dō, mandara-dō, miei-dō, mi-dō, sō-dō, Yakushi-dō and zen-dō.
  • garan – see shichi-dō garan.
  • hattō (法堂) – lit. "Dharma hall". A building dedicated to lectures by the chief priest on Buddhism's scriptures (the ).[25]
  • hōjō (方丈) – the living quarters of the head priest of a Zen temple.[28]
  • Hokke-dō (法華堂) – lit. "Lotus Sūtra hall". In Tendai Buddhism, a hall whose layout allows walking around a statue for meditation.[28] The purpose of walking is to concentrate on the Hokekyō and seek the ultimate truth.[28]
  • honbō (本坊) – residence of the jushoku, or head priest, of a temple.[28]
  • kairō (回廊・廻廊) – a long and roofed portico-like passage connecting two buildings.[28]
  • kaisan-dō (開山堂) – founder's hall, usually at a Zen temple. Building enshrining a statue, portrait or memorial tablet of the founder of either the temple or the sect it belongs to. Jōdo sect temples often call it miei-dō.[28]
  • karamon (唐門) – generic term for a gate with an arched roof.[28] See also mon.
  • karesansui (枯山水) – lit. dry landscape. A Japanese rock garden, often present in Zen temples, and sometimes found in temples of other sects too.
  • katōmado (華頭窓) – a bell shaped window originally developed at Zen temples in China, but widely used by other Buddhist sects as well as in lay buildings.
  • kon-dō (金堂) – lit. "golden hall", it is the main hall of a garan, housing the main object of worship.[28] Unlike a butsuden, it is a true two-story building (although the second story may sometimes be missing) measuring 9×7 bays.[28]
  • konrō (軒廊) – covered corridor between two buildings
  • korō or kurō (鼓楼) – tower housing a drum that marks the passing of time. It used to face the shōrō and lie next to the kō-dō, but now the drum is usually kept in the rōmon.[25]
  • kuin* (庫院) – kitchen/office of a Zen garan. A building hosting the galleys, the kitchen, and the offices of a temple.[25] Usually situated in front and to the side of the butsuden, facing the sō-dō. Also called kuri.
  • kuri (庫裏) – see kuin
  • kyō-dō (経堂) – see kyōzō.
  • kyōzō (経蔵) – lit. "scriptures deposit". Repository of sūtras and books about the temple's history.[28] Also called kyō–dō.
  • miei-dō (御影堂) – lit. "image hall". Building housing an image of the temple's founder, equivalent to a Zen sect's kaisan-dō.[28]
  • mi-dō (御堂) – a generic honorific term for a building which enshrines a sacred statue.[28]
  • Miroku Nyorai (弥勒如来) – Japanese name of Maitreya.
  • mon (門) – a temple's gate, which can be named after its position (nandaimon: lit. "great southern gate"), its structure (nijūmon: "two storied gate"), a deity (Niōmon: lit. "Nio gate"), or its use (onarimon: lit. "imperial visit gate", a gate reserved to the Emperor). The same gate can therefore be described using more than one term. For example, a Niōmon can at the same time be a nijūmon.
  • nandaimon (南大門) – the main southern gate of a temple, in particular that at Nara's Tōdai-ji.[28] See also mon.
  • nijūmon (二重門) – a two-storied gate with a roof surrounding the first floor.[28] See also mon.
  • Niōmon (仁王門 or 二王門) – a two-storied or high gate guarded by two wooden guardians called Niō.[28] See also mon.
  • noborirō (登廊) – a covered stairway at Nara's Hase-dera.
  • pagoda – see stupa and .
  • rōmon (楼門) - a high gate with two floors, only one of which has usable space, surrounded by a balcony and topped by a roof.[28] Buddhist in origin, it is used also in Shinto shrines.[29]
  • sai-dō (斎堂) – the refectory at a Zen temple or monastery.[25] See also jiki-dō.
  • sandō (参道) - the approach leading from a torii to a shrine. The term is also used sometimes at Buddhist temples too.
  • sanmon (三門 or 山門) – the gate in front of the butsuden.[28] The name is short for Sangedatsumon (三解脱門), lit. Gate of the three liberations.[28] Its three openings (kūmon (空門), musōmon (無相門) and muganmon (無願門)) symbolize the three gates to enlightenment.[28] Entering, one can free himself from three passions (貪 ton, or greed, 瞋 shin, or hatred, and 癡 chi, or "foolishness"). See also mon. Its size depends on the temple's rank. (See photos.)
  • sanrō (山廊) – small buildings at the ends of a two-storied Zen gate containing the stairs to the second story.
  • sekitō (石塔) – a stone pagoda (stupa).[25] See also
  • shichidō garan (七堂伽藍) – a double compound term literally meaning "seven halls" (七堂) and "(temple) buildings" (伽藍). What is counted in the group of seven buildings, or shichidō, can vary greatly from temple to temple and from school to school. In practice, shichidō garan can also mean simply a large complex.
    • Nanto Rokushū and later non-Zen schools: The shichidō garan in this case includes a kon-dō, a , a kō-dō, a shōrō, a jiki-dō, a sōbō, and a kyōzō.[25]
    • Zen schools: A Zen shichidō garan includes a butsuden or butsu-dō, a hattō, a ku'in, a sō-dō, a sanmon, a tōsu and a yokushitsu.[25]
  • shoin (書院) – originally a study and a place for lectures on the sutra within a temple, later the term came to mean just a study.[25]
  • shōrō (鐘楼) – a temple's belfry, a building from which a bell is hung.
  • sōbō (僧坊) – The monks' living quarters in a non-Zen garan
  • sō-dō (僧堂) – Lit. "monk hall". A building dedicated to the practice of Zazen.[25] It used to be dedicated to all kinds of activities, from eating to sleeping, centered on zazen.
  • sōmon (総門) – the gate at the entrance of a temple.[25] It precedes the bigger and more important sanmon. See also mon.
  • sōrin (相輪) – a spire reaching up from the center of the roof of some temple halls, tiered like a pagoda.
  • sotoba or sotōba (卒塔婆) – transliteration of the Sanskrit stupa.
    • A pagoda. Tower with an odd number of tiers (three, five, seven nine, or thirteen). See also stupa.
    • Strips of wood left behind tombs during annual ceremonies (tsuizen) symbolizing a stupa.[25] The upper part is segmented like a pagoda and carries Sanskrit inscriptions, sutras, and the kaimyō (posthumous name) of the deceased.

In present-day Japanese, sotoba usually has the latter meaning.

  • stupa – in origin a vessel for Buddha's relics, later also a receptacle for scriptures and other relics. Its shape changed in the Far East under the influence of the Chinese watchtower to form tower-like structures like the Tōbuttō, the gorintō, the hōkyōintō, the sekitō, the , or the much simpler wooden stick-style sotoba.[28]
  • tatchū (塔頭 or 塔中)
    • In Zen temples, a building containing a pagoda enshrining the ashes of an important priest stands.[28]
    • Later, it became a subsidiary temple or a minor temple depending from a larger one.[28]
    • Finally, it became also subsidiary temple being the family temple (bodaiji) of an important family.[28]
  • tahōtō (多宝塔) – a two-storied pagoda with a ground floor having a dome-shaped ceiling and a square pent roof, a round second floor and square roofs.[28]
  • temizuya (手水舎) – a fountain near the entrance of a shrine and a temple where worshipers can cleanse their hands and mouths before worship.[28]
  • tesaki (手先) – Term used to count the roof-supporting brackets (tokyō (斗きょう)) projecting from a temple's wall, usually composed of two steps (futatesaki (二手先))) or three (mitesaki 三津手先).[28]
  • tokyō (斗きょう) – see tesaki.
  • torii (鳥居)- the iconic Shinto gate at the entrance of a sacred area, usually, but not always, a shrine. Shrines of various size can be found next to, or inside temples.
  • tōrō (灯籠) – a lantern at a shrine or Buddhist temple. Some of its forms are influenced by the gorintō.
  • - (塔)
    • A pagoda, and an evolution of the stupa. After reaching China, the stupa evolved into a tower with an odd number of tiers (three, five, seven, nine, thirteen), excepted the tahōtō, which has two.[28]
    • The word is used together as a suffix of a numeral indicating the number of a pagoda's tiers (three tiers= san-jū-no-tō, five tiers= go-jū-no-tō, seven tiers = nana-jū-no-tō, etc.).
  • tōsu or tōshi (東司) – a Zen monastery's toilet.[28]
  • Yakushi-dō (薬師堂) – a building that enshrines a statue of Yakushi Nyorai.[28]*
  • yokushitsu* (浴室) – a monastery's bathroom.[28]
  • zen-dō (禅堂) – lit. "hall of Zen".[28] The building where monks practice zazen, and one of the main structures of a Zen garan.[28]

Temple names edit

A temple's name (jigō (寺号) or jimyō (寺名)) is usually made of three parts. The first is the sangō (山号, mountain name), the second is the ingō (院号, cloister name) and the third is the san'in-jigō (山院寺号, temple name).[30]

Sangō edit

Even though they may be located at the bottom of a valley, temples are metaphorically called mountains and even the numbers used to count them carry the ending -san or -zan (), hence the name sangō. This tradition goes back to the times when temples were primarily monasteries purposely built in remote mountainous areas.[30] The founding of a temple is called kaisan (開山, lit. opening of the mountain) for this reason.

No fixed rules for its formation exist, but the sangō is basically topographical in origin,[30] as in Hieizan Enryaku-ji: these two names together mean "Mount Hiei's Enryaku-ji". For this reason it is sometimes used as a personal name, particularly in Zen. There may be however some other semantic relationship between the sangō and the san'in-jigō, as for example in the case of Rurikōzan Yakushi-ji. The sangō and the jigō are simply different names of the same god.[30] Sometimes the sangō and the jigō are both posthumous names, for example of the founder's mother and father.

Ingō edit

The character in (), which gives the ingō its name, originally indicated an enclosure or section and therefore, by analogy, it later came to mean a cloister in a monastery.[30] It is in this sense which it is applied to temples or, more often, subtemples. It can be also found in the name of formerly minor temples risen by chance to great prominence. For example, Kawagoe's Kita-in used to be one of three subtemples of a temple which no longer exist. Less frequent in an ingō are -an (, hermitage) and - (, monk's living quarters). - (, hall) is normally used in the name of particular buildings of a temple's compound, e.g. Kannon-dō, but can be employed as a name of minor or small temples.[30]

Jigō edit

The only name in common use is however the jigō, (ending in -ji, -tera, -dera (〜寺, ... temple)) which can then be considered the main one.[30] The sangō and ingō are not, and never were, in common use. The character -ji it contains is sometimes pronounced tera or dera as in Kiyomizu-dera, normally when the rest of the name is an indigenous name (kun'yomi).[30]

Unofficial names edit

Temples are sometimes known by an unofficial but popular name. This is usually topographical in origin, as for example in the case of Asakusa's Sensō-ji, also known as Asakusa-dera. A temple can also be named after a special or famous characteristic, as for example in the case Kyoto's Saihō-ji, commonly called Koke-dera, or "moss temple" because of its famous moss garden. Unofficial names can have various other origins.

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The term "Shinto shrine" is used in contrast to "Buddhist temple" to mirror the distinction made in Japanese between Shinto and Buddhist religious structures. In Japanese the first are called jinja (神社), the second tera ().
  2. ^ The fact was reflected in their name. Kamakura's Tsurugaoka Hachiman-gū, for example, was then called Tsurugaoka Hachiman-gūji, or Tsurugaoka Shrine-temple.
  3. ^ An extant example of the syncretic fusion of Buddhism and Shinto is Seiganto-ji, part of the Kumano Sanzan shrine complex. It is one of the few jingūji still in existence after the forced separation of Shinto and Buddhism by the Japanese government during the Meiji restoration. For details of the subject of shrine-temples, see the article Shinbutsu shūgō.

References edit

  1. ^ Mason, Penelope (2005). History of Japanese Art. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Pearson Education. p. 305. ISBN 0-13-117601-3.
  2. ^ a b Beckwith, Christopher I. (2014). "The Aramaic source of the East Asian word for 'Buddhist monastery': on the spread of Central Asian monasticism in the Kushan Period (2014)". Journal Asiatique. 302 (1): 111–138. from the original on 2022-08-16. Retrieved 2020-01-01.
  3. ^ a b c d Bernhard, Scheid. . Religion in Japan (in German). University of Vienna. Archived from the original on 23 October 2010. Retrieved 17 October 2010.
  4. ^ Fujita Masaya, Koga Shūsaku, ed. (April 10, 1990). Nihon Kenchiku-shi (in Japanese) (September 30, 2008 ed.). Shōwa-dō. p. 79. ISBN 4-8122-9805-9.
  5. ^ a b Paine and Soper, Robert Treat and Alexander (1981). The Art and Architecture of Japan. Hong Kong: Yale University Press. p. 345. ISBN 0-300-05333-9.
  6. ^ Tamashige, Sachiko (2013). "Seeing Where Shinto and Buddhism Cross". The Japan Times. from the original on January 7, 2019. Retrieved April 7, 2019.
  7. ^ a b Fujita, Koga (2008:20-21)
  8. ^ Scheid, Bernhard. . Religion in Japan (in German). University of Vienna. Archived from the original on 1 July 2017. Retrieved 17 October 2010.
  9. ^ "Jingūji". Encyclopedia of Shinto. from the original on 12 December 2017. Retrieved 29 September 2010.
  10. ^ Young & Young 2007, p=47
  11. ^ a b Kamakura Official Textbook for Culture and Tourism
  12. ^ Mutsu (1995:172)
  13. ^ a b c d e f g Hozumi (1996:9-11)
  14. ^ Fowler, Sherry D. (2005). Muroji Rearranging Art and History at a Japanese Buddhist Temple. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. p. 9.
  15. ^ a b c d e f McCallum, Donald F. (2009). The Four Great Temples. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. pp. 207. ISBN 978-0-8248-3114-1.
  16. ^ a b Fletcher & Cruickshank 1996, p=737
  17. ^ Nishi & Hozumi 1996, p=20
  18. ^ a b c Fletcher & Cruickshank 1996, p=738
  19. ^ Young & Young 2007, p=44
  20. ^ Kamakura Shōkō Kaigijo (2008: 56–57)
  21. ^ a b c d Ōnuki (2008:80)
  22. ^ Shōtoku Taishi's Denkokonmokurokushō (聖徳太子伝古今目録抄)
  23. ^ Kōsetsu Bukkyō Daijiten (広説仏教語大辞典)
  24. ^ The six Buddhist schools 南都六宗, introduced to Japan during the Asuka and Nara periods
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Iwanami Kōjien
  26. ^ Sekiso Ōrai (尺素往来)
  27. ^ The Ōbaku School (黃檗) arrived in Japan in the 17th century.
  28. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af JAANUS
  29. ^ Fujita & Koga 2008, pp. 84–85
  30. ^ a b c d e f g h Seckel, Dietrich (Winter 1985). "Buddhist Temple Names in Japan". Monumenta Nipponica. 40, N. 4 (4): 359–386. doi:10.2307/2384822. JSTOR 2384822.

Bibliography edit

  • Fletcher, Sir Banister; Cruickshank, Dan (1996) [1896]. Sir Banister Fletcher's a history of architecture (20th illustrated ed.). Architectural Press. ISBN 0-7506-2267-9. Retrieved 2009-11-11.
  • Fujita Masaya, Koga Shūsaku, ed. (April 10, 1990). Nihon Kenchiku-shi (in Japanese) (September 30, 2008 ed.). Shōwa-dō. ISBN 4-8122-9805-9.
  • "Dictionary of Japanese Architectural and Art Historical Terminology (JAANUS)". Japanese Art Net User System.
  • Kamakura Shōkō Kaigijo (2008). Kamakura Kankō Bunka Kentei Kōshiki Tekisutobukku (in Japanese). Kamakura: Kamakura Shunshūsha. ISBN 978-4-7740-0386-3.
  • Mutsu, Iso (June 1995). "Jufuku-ji". Kamakura: Fact and Legend. Tokyo: Tuttle Publishing. ISBN 0-8048-1968-8.
  • Nishi, Kazuo; Hozumi, Kazuo (1996) [1983]. What is Japanese architecture? (illustrated ed.). Kodansha International. ISBN 4-7700-1992-0. Retrieved 2009-11-11.
  • Ōnuki, Akihiko (2008). Kamakura. Rekishi to Fushigi wo Aruku (in Japanese). Tokyo: Jitsugyō no Nihonsha. ISBN 978-4-408-59306-7.
  • Sansom, George (1962). "Japan: A Short Cultural History." New York: Appleton-Century Crofts, Inc.
  • Young, David; Young, Michiko (2007) [2004]. The art of Japanese architecture. Architecture and Interior Design (illustrated, revised ed.). Tuttle Publishing. ISBN 978-0-8048-3838-2. Retrieved 2009-11-11.

Further reading edit

  • Cluzel, Jean-Sébastien (October 2008). Architecture éternelle du Japon - De l'histoire aux mythes. Dijon: Editions Faton. ISBN 978-2-87844-107-9.

External links edit

  • Guide to over 190 with pictures and map.
  • Japanese temples of historical interest. With photos.
  • Kyoto and Japanese Buddhism by Tokushi Yusho. Brief history of temples in Kyoto by a Japanese scholar (English Translation)

buddhist, temples, japan, buddhist, temples, monasteries, along, with, shinto, shrines, most, numerous, famous, important, religious, buildings, japan, note, shogunates, leaders, japan, have, made, priority, update, rebuild, buddhist, temples, since, momoyama,. Buddhist temples or monasteries are along with Shinto shrines the most numerous famous and important religious buildings in Japan note 1 The shogunates or leaders of Japan have made it a priority to update and rebuild Buddhist temples since the Momoyama period late 16th century 1 The Japanese word for a Buddhist monastery is tera 寺 kun reading and the same kanji also has the pronunciation ji on reading so temple names frequently end in dera or ji Another ending in 院 is normally used to refer to minor temples Examples of temple names that have these suffixes are Kiyomizu dera Enryaku ji and Kōtoku in Higashi Hongan ji in Kyoto Contents 1 Etymology 2 Buddhist and Shinto structures 3 Architecture 3 1 General features 3 2 Four great temples of the seventh century 3 2 1 Asuka Dera 3 2 2 Kudara Odera 3 2 3 Kawaradera 3 2 4 Yakushiji 3 3 History 3 4 Layout and geomantic positioning 4 Common temple features 5 Temple names 5 1 Sangō 5 2 Ingō 5 3 Jigō 5 4 Unofficial names 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 Further reading 12 External linksEtymology editThe Japanese word for a Buddhist temple tera 寺 was anciently also written phonetically 天良 tera and is cognate with the Modern Korean Chǒl from Middle Korean Tiel the Jurchen Taira and the reconstructed Old Chinese dɘiaʁ all meaning Buddhist monastery 2 These words are apparently derived from the Aramaic word for Monastery dera daira der from the root dwr to live together rather than from the unrelated and later Indian word for monastery vihara and may have been transmitted by the first Central Asian translators of Buddhist scriptures such as An Shigao or Lokaksema 2 Buddhist and Shinto structures edit nbsp A torii at the entrance of Shitennō ji a Buddhist temple in Osaka In Japan Buddhist temples co exist with Shinto shrines and both share the basic features of Japanese traditional architecture 3 Both torii and rōmon mark the entrance to a shrine as well as to temples although torii is associated with Shinto and rōmon with Buddhism Some shrines for example Iwashimizu Hachiman gu have a Buddhist style main gate called sōmon Many temples have a temizuya and komainu like a shrine Conversely some shrines make use of incense or have a shōrō belltower Others for example Tanzan Shrine in Nara even have a pagoda 4 nbsp Honden of the Zennyo Ryuō shrine inside a Shingon temple in KyotoSimilarities between temples and shrines are also functional Like a shrine a Buddhist temple is not primarily a place of worship its most important buildings are used for the safekeeping of sacred objects the honzon equivalent to a shrine s shintai and are not accessible to worshipers 3 Unlike a Christian church a temple is also a monastery There are specialized buildings for certain rites but these are usually open only to a limited number of participants Religious mass gatherings do not take place with regularity as with Christian religions and are in any event not held inside the temple If many people are involved in a ceremony it will assume a festive character and will be held outdoors 3 The architectural elements of a Buddhist temple are meant to embody themes and teachings of Buddhism The reason for the great structural resemblances between the Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines lies in their common history When Shintoism first encountered Buddhism it became more interpretive as it did not try to explain the universe as Buddhism sometimes tried to 5 It is normal for a temple to have been also a shrine and obvious architectural differences between the two are few such that often only a specialist will notice them 3 Many visitors to Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines go for similar reasons such as prayer and for luck 6 The two religions coexist due to increased popularity of religions and the birth of new religions Shrines enshrining local kami existed long before the arrival of Buddhism but they consisted either of demarcated land areas with no building or of temporary shrines erected when needed 7 With the arrival of Buddhism in Japan in the 6th century shrines were subjected to its influence and adopted both the concept of permanent structures and the architecture of Buddhist temples 7 nbsp A Buddhist style gate karamon at Iwashimizu Hachiman gu The successive development of shinbutsu shugō syncretism of Buddhism and kami worship and of the honji suijaku theory brought to the almost complete fusion of kami worship and Buddhism 8 It became normal for shrines to be accompanied by temples in mixed complexes called jingu ji 神宮寺 lit shrine temple or miyadera 宮寺 lit shrine temple note 2 The opposite was also common most temples had at least a small shrine dedicated to its tutelary kami and were therefore called jisha 寺社 temple shrines The Meiji era eliminated most jinguji but left jisha intact such that even today most temples have at least one shrine sometimes very large on their premises and the Buddhist goddess Benzaiten is often worshiped at Shinto shrines note 3 9 As a consequence for centuries shrines and temples had a symbiotic relationship where each influenced the other Shrines took from Buddhism its gates mon the use of a hall for lay worshipers the use of vermilion colored wood and more while Chinese Buddhist architecture was adapted to Japanese tastes with more asymmetrical layouts greater use of natural materials and an adaptation of the monastery to the pre existing natural environment 10 The clear separation between Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines which today is the norm emerges only as a result of the shinbutsu bunri separation of kami and Buddhas law of 1868 This separation was mandated by law and many shrine temples were forced to become just shrines among them famous ones like Usa Hachiman gu and Tsurugaoka Hachiman gu Because mixing the two religions was now forbidden jinguji had to give away some of their properties or dismantle some of their buildings thus damaging the integrity of their cultural heritage and decreasing the historical and economic value of their properties 11 For example Tsurugaoka Hachiman gu s giant Niō the two wooden wardens usually found at the sides of a temple s entrance being objects of Buddhist worship and therefore illegal where they were were sold to Jufuku ji where they still are 12 The shrine temple also had to destroy Buddhism related buildings for example its tahōtō its midō and its shichidō garan 11 Architecture editMain article Japanese Buddhist architecture General features edit nbsp The roof is the dominant feature of a Buddhist temple Buddhist architecture in Japan is not native but imported from China and other Asian cultures over the centuries with such constancy that the building styles of all Six Dynasties are represented Its history is as a consequence dominated by Chinese and other Asian techniques and styles present even in Ise Shrine held to be the quintessence of Japanese architecture on one side and by Japanese original variations on those themes on the other 13 Partly due also to the variety of climates in Japan and the millennium encompassed between the first cultural import and the last the result is extremely heterogeneous but several practically universal features can be found nonetheless First of all is the choice of materials always wood in various forms planks straw tree bark etc for almost all structures Unlike both Western and some Chinese architecture the use of stone is avoided except for certain specific uses for example temple podia and pagoda foundations 13 The general structure is almost always the same post and lintel support a large and gently curved roof while the walls are paper thin often movable and in any case non carrying The post and lintel structure embodies the Axis Mundi of an iconic form of the Buddha that is typically represented in pagodas and Indian stupas Arches and barrel roofs are completely absent Gable and eave curves are gentler than in China and columnar entasis convexity at the center limited 13 The roof is the most visually impressive component often constituting half the size of the whole edifice 13 The slightly curved eaves extend far beyond the walls covering verandas and their weight must therefore be supported by complex bracket systems called tokyō These oversize eaves give the interior a characteristic dimness which contributes to the temple s atmosphere The interior of the building normally consists of a single room at the center called moya from which sometimes depart other less important spaces for example corridors called hisashi Inner space divisions are fluid and room size can be modified through the use of screens or movable paper walls The large single space offered by the main hall can therefore be altered according to the need 13 The separation between inside and outside is itself in some measure not absolute as entire walls can be removed opening the temple to visitors Verandas appear to be part of the building to an outsider but part of the external world to those in the temple Structures are therefore made to a certain extent part of their environment The use of construction modules keeps proportions between different parts of the edifice constant preserving its overall harmony 13 On the subject of temple proportions see also the article ken Even in cases as that of Nikkō Tōshō gu where every available space is heavily decorated ornamentation tends to follow and therefore emphasize rather than hide basic structures 13 Being shared by both sacred and profane architecture these architectonic features made it easy converting a lay building into a temple This happened for example at Hōryu ji where a noblewoman s mansion was transformed into a religious building Buddhist architecture of the Heian Period consisted of the re emergence of national tastes The temple Hojoji represents paradise and the pure land which embodies elements of Pure Land Buddhism The last formal temple was Motsuji 5 Muroji is a temple complex found below the mountain of Mount Muro The area behind the temple is sacred and is off limits to visitors and pilgrims The caves of Mount Muro are especially sacred The famous Dragon Cave is the thought to house the Dragon King who protects the country This is an example of how natural elements are sacred aspects of Buddhist temples 14 Four great temples of the seventh century edit There are four great temples of the seventh century Asukadera Kudara Odera Kawaradera and Yakushiji 15 Asuka Dera edit This great hall had three golden halls and was the first full scale temple It was the most significant temple in the Asuka period 15 The founder of Asukadera was Soga no Umako and he had built a smaller scaled residence similar to the great hall Many royal palaces were built in this natural environment for centuries later 15 When visited today it barely holds its grandeur it once had as there are no clear marks of where the original halls were and now the main scene is the parking lot with tour buses Kudara Odera edit The foundation remains might be those of the remains found on the site of Kibi Pond Kibi Ike This grand temple had a nine story pagoda that was constructed at the beginnings of Buddhism in Japan 15 Kawaradera edit The excavations and reconstruction of Kawaradera help to understand what it originally looked like The plan originally had two golden halls with a pagoda and then residential spaces for monks It was in an asymmetrical arrangement that was new and very innovative for this time Sources lack in the history of its construction and who commissioned it 15 Yakushiji edit In the early eighth century this temple was constructed in Nara and has been reproduced into the original layout today The monumental Yakushi triad exists here The structure is in bright colors as it also would have originally been 15 History edit nbsp Ichijō ji s pagoda an example of the wayō style The architecture of Buddhist temples as that of any structure has changed and developed over the centuries However while the particular details may vary the general themes and styles have strong similarities and common origins The already mentioned Hōryu ji was one of the first Buddhist temples built in Japan Its primary structures represent the style current in 6th century CE Sui dynasty China The Kondō Golden Hall is a double roofed structure supported by thick strong pillars and giving a feeling of boldness and weight Most Buddhist temples in Japan belong to one of four main styles Wayō A style developed in art and architecture in Japan during the Heian period by the esoteric sects Tendai and Shingon on the basis of contemporary Chinese architecture So called to distinguish it from imported Chinese styles in architecture it was characterized by simplicity refraining from ornamentation use of natural timber and in general plain materials Daibutsuyō a Japanese religious architectural style that emerged in the late 12th or early 13th century on the basis of contemporary Chinese architecture Introduced by priest Chōgen this grandiose and monumental style was based on Song Dynasty architecture and was the antithesis of the simple and traditional wayō style The Nandaimon at Tōdai ji and the Amida Hall at Jōdo ji are the only extant examples of this style 16 17 Zenshuyō A style that takes its name from its creators the Buddhist Zen sect and which emerged in the late 12th or early 13th century on the basis of contemporary Chinese architecture The zenshuyō was originally called karayō 唐様 Chinese style but like the Daibutsu style was renamed by Ōta Hirotarō a 20th century scholar Its characteristics are earthen floors decorative curved pent roofs mokoshi and pronouncedly curved main roofs cusped windows katōmado and paneled doors 16 18 Typical of the style is also the main hall Butsuden which has just one story but seems to have two because it has a covered pent roof called mokoshi Setchuyō an architectural style born in Japan during the Muromachi period from the fusion of elements from three preceding styles the wayō the daibutsuyō and zen yō It is exemplified by the main hall at Kakurin ji 18 19 The combination of wayō and daibutsuyō in particular became so frequent that sometimes it is classed separately by scholars under the name Shin wayō 新和様 new wayō 18 Layout and geomantic positioning edit nbsp Part of Tōshōdai ji s garan left to right the kondō the kōdō the korō and the Raiō Buddhist temple complexes consist of a number of structures arranged according to certain concepts or guidelines The arrangement of the major buildings garan haichi 伽藍配置 changed over time An early pattern had a gate tower kondō and kodō in a straight line from south to north Corridors extended east and west from the flanks of the gate then turned north and finally joined north of the kōdo forming a cloister around the pagoda and the major halls This pattern typified by Shitennō ji in Osaka came from China via Baekje the Chinese style of Buddhist temples though altered somewhat by China via Korean peninsula ultimately was based on that of Chinese palaces and this is evident in many of the basic design features that remain today in the temples of all three countries A Buddhist temple complex in Japan generally follows the pattern of a series of sacred spaces encircling a courtyard and entered via a set of gates These gates will typically have a pair of large guardian statues called Niō In addition many of the more important or powerful temples are built in locations that are favorable according to the precepts of Chinese geomancy For example Enryaku ji which sits atop Mount Hiei to the north east of Kyoto is said to defend the city from evil spirits by being placed in that direction The arrangements of mountains and other geographic features in particular directions around the temple play important roles as well This custom continued for a long time Eight centuries after the founding of Enryaku ji the Tokugawa shogunate established Kan ei ji in a similar direction for the protection of their Edo Castle Its mountain name Mount Tōei 東叡山 Tōei zan takes a character from Mount Hiei 比叡山 Hiei zan and can be interpreted as meaning the Mount Hiei of the East Kamakura s Tsurugaoka Hachiman gu is now only a Shinto shrine but before the Shinto and Buddhism Separation Order 神仏判然令 of 1868 its name was Tsurugaoka Hachiman gu ji 鶴岡八幡宮寺 Tsurugaoka Hachiman Shrine Temple and it was also a Buddhist temple one of the oldest of the city 20 The temple and the city were built with Feng Shui in mind 21 The present location was carefully chosen as the most propitious after consulting a diviner because it had a mountain to the north the Hokuzan 北山 a river to the east the Namerikawa and a great road to the west the Kotō Kaidō 古東街道 and was open to the south on Sagami Bay 21 Each direction was protected by a god Genbu guarded the north Seiryu the east Byakko the west and Suzaku the south 21 The willows near the ponds and the catalpas next to the Museum of Modern Art represent respectively Seiryu and Byakko 21 Geomancy lost in importance during the Heian period as temple layout was adapted to the natural environment disregarding feng shui In addition to geomantic considerations Buddhist temples like any other religious structures need to be organized in order to best serve their various purposes The most important space in any Buddhist temple complex is the sacred space where images of Buddhas and bodhisattvas are kept and where important rituals are performed nbsp Hattō at Zuiryu ji These areas are always separated from those accessible to the lay worshipers though the distance between the two and the manner of their separation is quite varied In many temples there is little more than a wooden railing dividing the sacred space with that of the laypeople but in many others there is a significant distance perhaps a graveled courtyard between the two Another structure or space of great importance accommodates the physical day to day needs of the clergy Spaces for eating sleeping and studying are essential particularly in those temples that serve as monasteries According to a 13th century text 22 a garan is a temple with a kon dō main hall a tō pagoda a kō dō lecture hall a shōrō belfry a jiki dō refectory a sōbō monks living quarters and a kyōzō scriptures deposit library 23 These are the seven listed as shichidō elements of a Nanto Rokushu 南都六宗 Nara six sects 24 temple 25 A 15th century text 26 describes how Zen school temples Sōtō 曹洞 Rinzai 臨済 27 included a butsuden or butsu dō main hall a hattō lecture hall a kuin kitchen office a sō dō building dedicated to Zazen a sanmon main gate a tōsu toilet and a yokushitsu bath Common temple features edit nbsp Buddhist temple of Kinkaku ji declared World Heritage Site by UNESCO Butsuden or Butsu dō 仏殿 仏堂 lit Hall of Buddha A Zen temple s main hall Seems to have two stories but has in fact only one and measures either 3 3 or 5 5 bays Any building enshrining the statue of Buddha or of a bodhisattva and dedicated to prayer 25 chinjusha 鎮守社 鎮主社 a small shrine built at a Buddhist temple and dedicated to its tutelary kami 25 chōzuya 手水舎 see temizuya chumon 中門 in a temple the gate after the naindaimon connected to a kairō 25 See also mon dō 堂 Lit hall Suffix for the name of the buildings part of a temple The prefix can be the name of a deity associated with it e g Yakushi dō or Yakushi hall or express the building s function within the temple s compound e g hon dō or main hall See also Butsu dō hō dō hon dō jiki dō kaisan dō kō dō kon dō kyō dō mandara dō miei dō mi dō sō dō Yakushi dō and zen dō garan see shichi dō garan hattō 法堂 lit Dharma hall A building dedicated to lectures by the chief priest on Buddhism s scriptures the hō 25 hōjō 方丈 the living quarters of the head priest of a Zen temple 28 Hokke dō 法華堂 lit Lotus Sutra hall In Tendai Buddhism a hall whose layout allows walking around a statue for meditation 28 The purpose of walking is to concentrate on the Hokekyō and seek the ultimate truth 28 honbō 本坊 residence of the jushoku or head priest of a temple 28 kairō 回廊 廻廊 a long and roofed portico like passage connecting two buildings 28 kaisan dō 開山堂 founder s hall usually at a Zen temple Building enshrining a statue portrait or memorial tablet of the founder of either the temple or the sect it belongs to Jōdo sect temples often call it miei dō 28 karamon 唐門 generic term for a gate with an arched roof 28 See also mon karesansui 枯山水 lit dry landscape A Japanese rock garden often present in Zen temples and sometimes found in temples of other sects too katōmado 華頭窓 a bell shaped window originally developed at Zen temples in China but widely used by other Buddhist sects as well as in lay buildings kon dō 金堂 lit golden hall it is the main hall of a garan housing the main object of worship 28 Unlike a butsuden it is a true two story building although the second story may sometimes be missing measuring 9 7 bays 28 konrō 軒廊 covered corridor between two buildings korō or kurō 鼓楼 tower housing a drum that marks the passing of time It used to face the shōrō and lie next to the kō dō but now the drum is usually kept in the rōmon 25 kuin 庫院 kitchen office of a Zen garan A building hosting the galleys the kitchen and the offices of a temple 25 Usually situated in front and to the side of the butsuden facing the sō dō Also called kuri kuri 庫裏 see kuin kyō dō 経堂 see kyōzō kyōzō 経蔵 lit scriptures deposit Repository of sutras and books about the temple s history 28 Also called kyō dō miei dō 御影堂 lit image hall Building housing an image of the temple s founder equivalent to a Zen sect s kaisan dō 28 mi dō 御堂 a generic honorific term for a building which enshrines a sacred statue 28 Miroku Nyorai 弥勒如来 Japanese name of Maitreya mon 門 a temple s gate which can be named after its position nandaimon lit great southern gate its structure nijumon two storied gate a deity Niōmon lit Nio gate or its use onarimon lit imperial visit gate a gate reserved to the Emperor The same gate can therefore be described using more than one term For example a Niōmon can at the same time be a nijumon nandaimon 南大門 the main southern gate of a temple in particular that at Nara s Tōdai ji 28 See also mon nijumon 二重門 a two storied gate with a roof surrounding the first floor 28 See also mon Niōmon 仁王門 or 二王門 a two storied or high gate guarded by two wooden guardians called Niō 28 See also mon noborirō 登廊 a covered stairway at Nara s Hase dera pagoda see stupa and tō rōmon 楼門 a high gate with two floors only one of which has usable space surrounded by a balcony and topped by a roof 28 Buddhist in origin it is used also in Shinto shrines 29 sai dō 斎堂 the refectory at a Zen temple or monastery 25 See also jiki dō sandō 参道 the approach leading from a torii to a shrine The term is also used sometimes at Buddhist temples too sanmon 三門 or 山門 the gate in front of the butsuden 28 The name is short for Sangedatsumon 三解脱門 lit Gate of the three liberations 28 Its three openings kumon 空門 musōmon 無相門 and muganmon 無願門 symbolize the three gates to enlightenment 28 Entering one can free himself from three passions 貪 ton or greed 瞋 shin or hatred and 癡 chi or foolishness See also mon Its size depends on the temple s rank See photos sanrō 山廊 small buildings at the ends of a two storied Zen gate containing the stairs to the second story sekitō 石塔 a stone pagoda stupa 25 See also tō shichidō garan 七堂伽藍 a double compound term literally meaning seven halls 七堂 and temple buildings 伽藍 What is counted in the group of seven buildings or shichidō can vary greatly from temple to temple and from school to school In practice shichidō garan can also mean simply a large complex Nanto Rokushu and later non Zen schools The shichidō garan in this case includes a kon dō a tō a kō dō a shōrō a jiki dō a sōbō and a kyōzō 25 Zen schools A Zen shichidō garan includes a butsuden or butsu dō a hattō a ku in a sō dō a sanmon a tōsu and a yokushitsu 25 shoin 書院 originally a study and a place for lectures on the sutra within a temple later the term came to mean just a study 25 shōrō 鐘楼 a temple s belfry a building from which a bell is hung sōbō 僧坊 The monks living quarters in a non Zen garan sō dō 僧堂 Lit monk hall A building dedicated to the practice of Zazen 25 It used to be dedicated to all kinds of activities from eating to sleeping centered on zazen sōmon 総門 the gate at the entrance of a temple 25 It precedes the bigger and more important sanmon See also mon sōrin 相輪 a spire reaching up from the center of the roof of some temple halls tiered like a pagoda sotoba or sotōba 卒塔婆 transliteration of the Sanskrit stupa A pagoda Tower with an odd number of tiers three five seven nine or thirteen See also stupa Strips of wood left behind tombs during annual ceremonies tsuizen symbolizing a stupa 25 The upper part is segmented like a pagoda and carries Sanskrit inscriptions sutras and the kaimyō posthumous name of the deceased In present day Japanese sotoba usually has the latter meaning stupa in origin a vessel for Buddha s relics later also a receptacle for scriptures and other relics Its shape changed in the Far East under the influence of the Chinese watchtower to form tower like structures like the Tōbuttō the gorintō the hōkyōintō the sekitō the tō or the much simpler wooden stick style sotoba 28 tatchu 塔頭 or 塔中 In Zen temples a building containing a pagoda enshrining the ashes of an important priest stands 28 Later it became a subsidiary temple or a minor temple depending from a larger one 28 Finally it became also subsidiary temple being the family temple bodaiji of an important family 28 tahōtō 多宝塔 a two storied pagoda with a ground floor having a dome shaped ceiling and a square pent roof a round second floor and square roofs 28 temizuya 手水舎 a fountain near the entrance of a shrine and a temple where worshipers can cleanse their hands and mouths before worship 28 tesaki 手先 Term used to count the roof supporting brackets tokyō 斗きょう projecting from a temple s wall usually composed of two steps futatesaki 二手先 or three mitesaki 三津手先 28 tokyō 斗きょう see tesaki torii 鳥居 the iconic Shinto gate at the entrance of a sacred area usually but not always a shrine Shrines of various size can be found next to or inside temples tōrō 灯籠 a lantern at a shrine or Buddhist temple Some of its forms are influenced by the gorintō tō 塔 A pagoda and an evolution of the stupa After reaching China the stupa evolved into a tower with an odd number of tiers three five seven nine thirteen excepted the tahōtō which has two 28 The word is used together as a suffix of a numeral indicating the number of a pagoda s tiers three tiers san ju no tō five tiers go ju no tō seven tiers nana ju no tō etc tōsu or tōshi 東司 a Zen monastery s toilet 28 Yakushi dō 薬師堂 a building that enshrines a statue of Yakushi Nyorai 28 yokushitsu 浴室 a monastery s bathroom 28 zen dō 禅堂 lit hall of Zen 28 The building where monks practice zazen and one of the main structures of a Zen garan 28 Temple names editA temple s name jigō 寺号 or jimyō 寺名 is usually made of three parts The first is the sangō 山号 mountain name the second is the ingō 院号 cloister name and the third is the san in jigō 山院寺号 temple name 30 Sangō edit Even though they may be located at the bottom of a valley temples are metaphorically called mountains and even the numbers used to count them carry the ending san or zan 山 hence the name sangō This tradition goes back to the times when temples were primarily monasteries purposely built in remote mountainous areas 30 The founding of a temple is called kaisan 開山 lit opening of the mountain for this reason No fixed rules for its formation exist but the sangō is basically topographical in origin 30 as in Hieizan Enryaku ji these two names together mean Mount Hiei s Enryaku ji For this reason it is sometimes used as a personal name particularly in Zen There may be however some other semantic relationship between the sangō and the san in jigō as for example in the case of Rurikōzan Yakushi ji The sangō and the jigō are simply different names of the same god 30 Sometimes the sangō and the jigō are both posthumous names for example of the founder s mother and father Ingō edit The character in 院 which gives the ingō its name originally indicated an enclosure or section and therefore by analogy it later came to mean a cloister in a monastery 30 It is in this sense which it is applied to temples or more often subtemples It can be also found in the name of formerly minor temples risen by chance to great prominence For example Kawagoe s Kita in used to be one of three subtemples of a temple which no longer exist Less frequent in an ingō are an 庵 hermitage and bō 坊 monk s living quarters dō 堂 hall is normally used in the name of particular buildings of a temple s compound e g Kannon dō but can be employed as a name of minor or small temples 30 Jigō edit The only name in common use is however the jigō ending in ji tera dera 寺 temple which can then be considered the main one 30 The sangō and ingō are not and never were in common use The character ji it contains is sometimes pronounced tera or dera as in Kiyomizu dera normally when the rest of the name is an indigenous name kun yomi 30 Unofficial names edit Temples are sometimes known by an unofficial but popular name This is usually topographical in origin as for example in the case of Asakusa s Sensō ji also known as Asakusa dera A temple can also be named after a special or famous characteristic as for example in the case Kyoto s Saihō ji commonly called Koke dera or moss temple because of its famous moss garden Unofficial names can have various other origins Gallery edit nbsp Kōzan ji s Butsuden in Shimonoseki nbsp Motoyama ji s chinju dō nbsp Chōhō ji s chinju dō nbsp Chumon at Hōryu ji nbsp Kennin ji s hattō nbsp Tōdai ji s Hokke dō nbsp Jingo ji s honbō nbsp Tōfuku ji s hon dō nbsp Engyō ji s jiki dō nbsp Yakushi ji s kairō nbsp Tōfuku ji s kaisan dō nbsp Hōgon ji s karamon nbsp Shitennō ji s karesansui nbsp A katōmado nbsp Tōfuku ji s sanmon is 5 ken wide nbsp Kō dō at Tōshōdai ji nbsp Kon dō at Tōshōdai ji nbsp A konrō nbsp Miei dō at Tō ji nbsp Nandaimon at Hōryu ji nbsp The noborirō at Nara s Hase dera nbsp Nijumon at Kōmyō ji in Ayabe nbsp Ishite ji s niōmon nbsp East Pagoda at Yakushi ji in Nara nbsp Enjō ji s rōmon nbsp Kiyomizu dera s sandō nbsp A high rank five bay sanmon at Chion in Note the sanrō nbsp A middle rank three bay sanmon at Myōtsu ji nbsp A low rank sanmon at Sozen ji in Osaka nbsp The sanrō of Tōfuku ji s sanmon See also the sanmon s photo above nbsp Eikan dō Zenrin ji s sōmon nbsp Negoro ji s large sōrin metal spire on top of a daitō large tahōtō nbsp Saifuku ji s shoin nbsp Tōdai ji s shōrō an early type nbsp Saidai ji s shōrō a later type nbsp Kongō Sanmai in s tahōtō niju no tō nbsp Ichijō ji s three tiered pagoda sanju no tō nbsp Zentsu ji s five tiered pagoda goju no tō nbsp Mii dera s temizuya nbsp Brackets tokyō futatesaki in this case under the eaves of a sanmon s roof nbsp A torii on a temple s Oyake ji sandō nbsp Enryaku ji s shaka dō nbsp Tōfuku ji s tōsu nbsp Jōdo ji s yakushi dō nbsp Myōshin ji s yokushitsu the temple s baths nbsp Tōfuku ji s zen dō nbsp Gate at Jōchibyō the grave of Katō Kiyomasa at Honmyō ji Kumamoto nbsp Rakan ji s Sanmon in NakatsuSee also editBuddhism in Japan Buddhist art Buddhist architecture Glossary of Japanese Buddhism Japanese art List of Buddhist temples List of National Treasures of Japan temples Senjafuda TerakoyaNotes edit The term Shinto shrine is used in contrast to Buddhist temple to mirror the distinction made in Japanese between Shinto and Buddhist religious structures In Japanese the first are called jinja 神社 the second tera 寺 The fact was reflected in their name Kamakura s Tsurugaoka Hachiman gu for example was then called Tsurugaoka Hachiman guji or Tsurugaoka Shrine temple An extant example of the syncretic fusion of Buddhism and Shinto is Seiganto ji part of the Kumano Sanzan shrine complex It is one of the few jinguji still in existence after the forced separation of Shinto and Buddhism by the Japanese government during the Meiji restoration For details of the subject of shrine temples see the article Shinbutsu shugō References edit Mason Penelope 2005 History of Japanese Art Upper Saddle River New Jersey Pearson Education p 305 ISBN 0 13 117601 3 a b Beckwith Christopher I 2014 The Aramaic source of the East Asian word for Buddhist monastery on the spread of Central Asian monasticism in the Kushan Period 2014 Journal Asiatique 302 1 111 138 Archived from the original on 2022 08 16 Retrieved 2020 01 01 a b c d Bernhard Scheid Anleitung Religiōse Bauten in Japan Religion in Japan in German University of Vienna Archived from the original on 23 October 2010 Retrieved 17 October 2010 Fujita Masaya Koga Shusaku ed April 10 1990 Nihon Kenchiku shi in Japanese September 30 2008 ed Shōwa dō p 79 ISBN 4 8122 9805 9 a b Paine and Soper Robert Treat and Alexander 1981 The Art and Architecture of Japan Hong Kong Yale University Press p 345 ISBN 0 300 05333 9 Tamashige Sachiko 2013 Seeing Where Shinto and Buddhism Cross The Japan Times Archived from the original on January 7 2019 Retrieved April 7 2019 a b Fujita Koga 2008 20 21 Scheid Bernhard Shinto Versuch einer Begriffbestimmung Religion in Japan in German University of Vienna Archived from the original on 1 July 2017 Retrieved 17 October 2010 Jinguji Encyclopedia of Shinto Archived from the original on 12 December 2017 Retrieved 29 September 2010 Young amp Young 2007 p 47 a b Kamakura Official Textbook for Culture and Tourism Mutsu 1995 172 a b c d e f g Hozumi 1996 9 11 Fowler Sherry D 2005 Muroji Rearranging Art and History at a Japanese Buddhist Temple Honolulu University of Hawai i Press p 9 a b c d e f McCallum Donald F 2009 The Four Great Temples Honolulu University of Hawai i Press pp 207 ISBN 978 0 8248 3114 1 a b Fletcher amp Cruickshank 1996 p 737 Nishi amp Hozumi 1996 p 20 a b c Fletcher amp Cruickshank 1996 p 738 Young amp Young 2007 p 44 Kamakura Shōkō Kaigijo 2008 56 57 a b c d Ōnuki 2008 80 Shōtoku Taishi s Denkokonmokurokushō 聖徳太子伝古今目録抄 Kōsetsu Bukkyō Daijiten 広説仏教語大辞典 The six Buddhist schools 南都六宗 introduced to Japan during the Asuka and Nara periods a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Iwanami Kōjien Sekiso Ōrai 尺素往来 The Ōbaku School 黃檗 arrived in Japan in the 17th century a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af JAANUS Fujita amp Koga 2008 pp 84 85 a b c d e f g h Seckel Dietrich Winter 1985 Buddhist Temple Names in Japan Monumenta Nipponica 40 N 4 4 359 386 doi 10 2307 2384822 JSTOR 2384822 Bibliography editFletcher Sir Banister Cruickshank Dan 1996 1896 Sir Banister Fletcher s a history of architecture 20th illustrated ed Architectural Press ISBN 0 7506 2267 9 Retrieved 2009 11 11 Fujita Masaya Koga Shusaku ed April 10 1990 Nihon Kenchiku shi in Japanese September 30 2008 ed Shōwa dō ISBN 4 8122 9805 9 Dictionary of Japanese Architectural and Art Historical Terminology JAANUS Japanese Art Net User System Kamakura Shōkō Kaigijo 2008 Kamakura Kankō Bunka Kentei Kōshiki Tekisutobukku in Japanese Kamakura Kamakura Shunshusha ISBN 978 4 7740 0386 3 Mutsu Iso June 1995 Jufuku ji Kamakura Fact and Legend Tokyo Tuttle Publishing ISBN 0 8048 1968 8 Nishi Kazuo Hozumi Kazuo 1996 1983 What is Japanese architecture illustrated ed Kodansha International ISBN 4 7700 1992 0 Retrieved 2009 11 11 Ōnuki Akihiko 2008 Kamakura Rekishi to Fushigi wo Aruku in Japanese Tokyo Jitsugyō no Nihonsha ISBN 978 4 408 59306 7 Sansom George 1962 Japan A Short Cultural History New York Appleton Century Crofts Inc Young David Young Michiko 2007 2004 The art of Japanese architecture Architecture and Interior Design illustrated revised ed Tuttle Publishing ISBN 978 0 8048 3838 2 Retrieved 2009 11 11 Further reading editCluzel Jean Sebastien October 2008 Architecture eternelle du Japon De l histoire aux mythes Dijon Editions Faton ISBN 978 2 87844 107 9 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Buddhist temples in Japan Japanese Temples Guide to over 190 with pictures and map Japanese temples of historical interest With photos Kyoto and Japanese Buddhism by Tokushi Yusho Brief history of temples in Kyoto by a Japanese scholar English Translation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Buddhist temples in Japan amp oldid 1220952765, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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