fbpx
Wikipedia

Buddhism in Japan

Buddhism in Japan (日本の仏教, Nihon no Bukkyō) was first established in the 6th century CE.[3][4][5] Most of the Japanese Buddhists belong to new schools of Buddhism which were established in the Kamakura period (1185-1333).[6] During the Edo (Tokugawa)-period (1603–1868), Buddhism was controlled by the feudal Shogunate. The Meiji-period (1868–1912) saw a strong response against Buddhism, with persecution and a forced separation between Buddhism and Shinto (Shinbutsu bunri).

Buddhism in Japan
日本の仏教
Total population
Estimates vary, from c.71 million or 57% (Government est., 2022)[1] to under 20% (JGSS Research Center, 2017).[2]
Regions with significant populations
Throughout Japan
Religions
Buddhism (mostly East Asian Buddhism)
Languages
Japanese and other languages

The largest sects of Japanese Buddhism are Pure Land Buddhism with 22 million believers, followed by Nichiren Buddhism with 10 million believers, Shingon Buddhism with 5.4 million, Zen Buddhism with 5.3 million, Tendai Buddhism with 2.8 million, and only about 700,000 for the six old schools established in the Nara period (710-794).[6]

History edit

Early Buddhism (5th-13th century) edit

Arrival and initial spread of Buddhism edit

Originating in India, Buddhism arrived in Japan by first making its way to China and Korea through the Silk Road and then traveling by sea to the Japanese archipelago.[7] Though often overlooked in western academia, Buddhism was transmitted through trade routes across South East Asia in addition to the Sinophere.[8] As such, early Japanese Buddhism is strongly influenced by Chinese Buddhism and Korean Buddhism. Though the "official" introduction of Buddhism to the country occurred at some point in the middle of the sixth century, there were likely earlier contacts and attempts to introduce the religion. Immigrants from the Korean Peninsula, as well as merchants and sailors who frequented the mainland, likely brought Buddhism with them independent of the transmission as recorded in court chronicles.[9] Some Japanese sources mention this explicitly. For example, the Heian Period Fusō ryakki (Abridged Annals of Japan), mentions a foreigner known in Japanese as Shiba no Tatsuto, who may have been Chinese-born, Baekje-born, or a descendant of an immigrant group in Japan. He is said to have built a thatched hut in Yamato and enshrined an object of worship there. Immigrants like this may have been a source for the Soga clan's later sponsorship of Buddhism.[10]

The Nihon Shoki (Chronicles of Japan) provides a date of 552 for when King Seong of Baekje (now western South Korea) sent a mission to Emperor Kinmei that included an image of the Buddha Shakyamuni, ritual banners, and sutras. This event is usually considered the official introduction of Buddhism to Japan.[4][3] Other sources, however, give the date of 538 and both dates are thought to be unreliable. However, it can still be said that in the middle of the sixth century, Buddhism was introduced through official diplomatic channels.[11]

According to the Nihon Shoki, after receiving the Buddhist gifts, the Japanese emperor asked his officials if the Buddha should be worshipped in Japan. They were divided on the issue, with Soga no Iname (506–570) supporting the idea while Mononobe no Okoshi and Nakatomi no Kamako worried that the kami of Japan would become angry at this worship of a foreign deity. The Nihon Shoki then states that the emperor allowed only the Soga clan to worship the Buddha, to test it out.[12]

Thus, the powerful Soga clan played a key role in the early spread of Buddhism in the country. Their support, along with that of immigrant groups like the Hata clan, gave Buddhism its initial impulse in Japan along with its first temple (Hōkō-ji, also known as Asukadera).[13] The Nakatomi and Mononobe, however, continued to oppose the Soga, blaming their worship for disease and disorder. These opponents of Buddhism are even said to have thrown the image of the Buddha into the Naniwa canal. Eventually outright war erupted. The Soga side, led by Soga no Umako and a young Prince Shōtoku, emerged victorious and promoted Buddhism on the archipelago with support of the broader court.

Based on traditional sources, Shōtoku has been seen as an ardent Buddhist who taught, wrote on, and promoted Buddhism widely, especially during the reign of Empress Suiko (554 – 15 April 628). He is also believed to have sent envoys to China and is even seen as a spiritually accomplished bodhisattva who is the true founder of Japanese Buddhism. Modern historians have questioned much of this, seeing most of it as a constructed hagiography.[14] Regardless of his actual historical role, however, it is beyond doubt that Shōtoku became an important figure in Japanese Buddhist lore beginning soon after his death if not earlier.

Taoist traditions of immortality and becoming a xian made it to Japan in the times of early Buddhism, but Buddhism absorbed them. "[U]nder Buddhist influence," these stories were "associated with certain ascetic monks who were devoted to the Lotus Sutra."[15]

Asuka Buddhism (552–645) edit

Asuka-period (592 to 710 (or 593 to 710)) Buddhism (Asuka bukkyō) refers to Buddhist practice and thought that mainly developed after 552 in the Nara Basin region.[16] Buddhism grew here through the support and efforts of two main groups: immigrant kinship groups like the Hata clan (who were experts in Chinese technology as well as intellectual and material culture), and through aristocratic clans like the Soga.[17]

Immigrant groups like the Korean monks who supposedly instructed Shōtoku introduced Buddhist learning, administration, ritual practice and the skills to build Buddhist art and architecture. They included individuals like Ekan (dates unknown), a Koguryŏ priest of the Madhyamaka school, who (according to the Nihon Shoki) was appointed to the highest rank of primary monastic prelate (sōjō).[18]

Aside from the Buddhist immigrant groups, Asuka Buddhism was mainly the purview of aristocratic groups like the Soga clan and other related clans, who patronized clan temples as a way to express their power and influence. These temples mainly focused on the performance of rituals which were believed to provide magical effects, such as protection.[19] During this period, Buddhist art was dominated by the style of Tori Busshi, who came from a Korean immigrant family.[19]

Hakuhō Buddhism (645–710) edit

Hakuhō (673 through 686) Buddhism (Hakuhō refers to Emperor Tenmu) saw the official patronage of Buddhism being taken up by the Japanese imperial family, who replaced the Soga clan as the main patrons of Buddhism. Japanese Buddhism at this time was also influenced by Tang dynasty (618–907) Buddhism.[20] It was also during this time that Buddhism began to spread from the Yamato Province to the other regions and islands of Japan.[20] An important part of the centralizing reforms of this era (the Taika reforms) was the use of Buddhist institutions and rituals (often performed at the palace or capital) in the service of the state.[21]

The imperial government also actively built and managed the Buddhist temples as well as the monastic community.[22] The Nihon Shoki states that in 624 there were 46 Buddhist temples.[23] Some of these temples include Kawaradera and Yakushiji. Archeological research has also revealed numerous local and regional temples outside of the capital.[24] At the state temples, Buddhist rituals were performed in order to create merit for the royal family and the well-being of the nation. Particular attention was paid to rituals centered around Buddhist sutras (scriptures), such as the Golden Light Sutra.[25] The monastic community was overseen by the complex and hierarchical imperial Monastic Office (sōgō), who managed everything from the monastic code to the color of the robes.[26]

Nara Buddhism (710–794) edit

 
A model of Yakushi-ji, a major imperial temple of Nara
 
Model of the garan of Todai-ji seen from the north side
 
Todai-ji's Great Buddha (Daibutsu)

In 710, Empress Genme moved the state capital to Heijōkyō, (modern Nara) thus inaugurating the Nara period. This period saw the establishment of the kokubunji system, which was a way to manage provincial temples through a network of national temples in each province.[27] The head temple of the entire system was Tōdai-ji (completed in 752).[28]

Nara state sponsorship saw the development of the six great Nara schools, called Nanto Rokushū (南都六宗, lit. the Six Sects of the Southern Capital), all were continuations of Chinese Buddhist schools. The temples of these schools became important places for the study of Buddhist doctrine.[29] The six Nara schools were: Ritsu (Vinaya), Jōjitsu (Tattvasiddhi), Kusha-shū (Abhidharmakosha), Sanronshū (East Asian Mādhyamaka), Hossō (East Asian Yogācāra) and Kegon (Huayan).[30]

These schools were centered around the capital where great temples such as the Asuka-dera and Tōdai-ji were erected. The most influential of the temples are known as the "seven great temples of the southern capital" (Nanto Shichi Daiji). The temples were not exclusive and sectarian organizations. Instead, temples were apt to have scholars versed in several of schools of thought. It has been suggested that they can best be thought of as "study groups".[31]

State temples continued the practice of conducting numerous rituals for the good of the nation and the imperial family. Rituals centered on scriptures like the Golden Light and the Lotus Sūtra.[32] Another key function of the state temples was the transcription of Buddhist scriptures, which was seen as generating much merit.[33] Buddhist monastics were firmly controlled by the state's monastic office through an extensive monastic code of law, and monastic ranks were matched to the ranks of government officials.[34] It was also during this era that the Nihon Shoki was written, a text which shows significant Buddhist influence. The monk Dōji (?–744) may have been involved in its compilation.[35]

The elite state sponsored Nara Buddhism was not the only type of Buddhism at this time. There were also groups of unofficial monastics or priests (or, self-ordained; shido sōni) who were either not formally ordained and trained through the state channels, or who chose to preach and practice outside of the system. These "unofficial" monks were often subject to state punishment.[35] Their practice could have also included Daoist and indigenous kami worship elements. Some of these figures became immensely popular and were a source of criticism for the sophisticated, academic and bureaucratic Buddhism of the capital.

Early Heian Period Buddhism (794–950) edit

 
An illustration of Saichō with tea leaves. He is known for having introduced tea to Japan.
 
Sanjūsangen-dō in Kyoto, a print of a Tendai temple, by Toyoharu, c. 1772–1781

During the Heian period, the capital was shifted to Kyoto (then known as Heiankyō) by emperor Kanmu, mainly for economic and strategic reasons. As before, Buddhist institutions continued to play a key role in the state, with Kanmu being a strong supporter of the new Tendai school of Saichō (767–822) in particular.[36] Saichō, who had studied the Tiantai school in China, established the influential temple complex of Enryakuji at Mount Hiei, and developed a new system of monastic regulations based on the bodhisattva precepts.[37] This new system allowed Tendai to free itself from direct state control.[38]

Also during this period, the Shingon ( Ch. Zhenyan; "True Word", from Sanskrit: "Mantra") school was established in the country under the leadership of Kūkai. This school also received state sponsorship and introduced esoteric Vajrayana (also referred to as mikkyō, "secret teaching") elements.[39]

The new Buddhist lineages of Shingon and Tendai also developed somewhat independently from state control, partly because the old system was becoming less important to Heian aristocrats.[40] This period also saw an increase in the official separation between the different schools, due to a new system that specified the particular school which an imperial priest (nenbundosha) belonged to.[41]

Later Heian Period Buddhism (950–1185) edit

 
Statue of Kūya by Kōshō, son of Unkei, dating to the first decade of the thirteenth century. The six syllables of the nembutsu, na-mu-a-mi-da-butsu, are represented literally by six small Amida figures streaming from Kūya's mouth.

During this period, there was a consolidation of a series of annual court ceremonies (nenjū gyōji).[42] Tendai Buddhism was particularly influential, and the veneration of the Lotus Sūtra grew in popularity, even among the low class and non-aristocratic population, which often formed religious groups such as the "Lotus holy ones" (hokke hijiri or jikyōja) and mountain ascetics (shugenja).[43] Shugendō is an example of the fusion of Shinto mountain worship and Buddhism. The aim of Shugendo practitioners is to save the masses by acquiring supernatural powers through rigorous training while walking through steep mountains.[44][45]

Furthermore, during this era, new Buddhist traditions began to develop. While some of these have been grouped into what is referred to as "new Kamakura" Buddhism, their beginning can actually be traced to the late Heian. This includes the practice of Japanese Pure Land Buddhism, which focuses on the contemplation and chanting of the nenbutsu, the name of the Buddha Amida (Skt. Amitābha), in hopes of being reborn in the Buddha field of Sukhāvatī. This practice was initially popular in Tendai monasteries but then spread throughout Japan.[46] Texts discussing miracles associated with the Buddhas and bodhisattvas became popular in this period, along with texts which outlined death bed rites.[47]

During this period, some Buddhist temples established groups of warrior-monks called Sōhei. This phenomenon began in Tendai temples, as they vied for political influence with each other.[48] The Genpei war saw various groups of warrior monks join the fray.

There were also semi-independent clerics (who were called shōnin or hijiri, "holy ones") who lived away from the major Buddhist monasteries and preached to the people. These figures had much more contact with the general populace than other monks.[49] The most well known of these figures was Kūya (alt. Kōya; 903–972), who wandered throughout the provinces engaging in good works (sazen), preaching on nembutsu practice and working with local Buddhist cooperatives (zenchishiki) to create images of bodhisattvas like Kannon.[50]

 
A scroll depicting the kami Hachiman dressed as a Buddhist monk, an example of Shinbutsu-shūgō ("syncretism of kami and buddhas").

Another important development during this era was that Buddhist monks were now being widely encouraged by the state to pray for the salvation of Japanese kami (divine beings in Shinto). The merging of Shinto deities with Buddhist practice was not new at this time. Already in the eighth century, some major Shinto shrines (jingūji) included Buddhist monks which conducted rites for shinto divinities. One of the earliest such figures was "great Bodhisattva Hachiman" (Hachiman daibosatsu) who was popular in Kyūshū.[51]

Popular sites for pilgrimage and religious practice, like Kumano, included both kami worship and the worship of Buddhas and bodhisattvas, which were often associated with each other. Furthermore, temples like Tōdai-ji also included shrines for the worship of kami (in Tōdai-ji's case, it was the kami Shukongōjin that was enshrined in its rear entryway).[52]

Buddhist monks interpreted their relationship to the kami in different ways. Some monks saw them as just worldly beings who could be prayed for. Other saw them as manifestations of Buddhas and bodhisattvas. For example, the Mt. Hiei monk Eryō saw the kami as "traces" (suijaku) of the Buddha. This idea, called essence-trace (honji-suijaku), would have a strong influence throughout the medieval era.[53]

 
Sutra art from the Heike-Nôkyô, chapter 12.

The copying and writing of Buddhist scripture was a widespread practice in this period. It was seen as producing merit (good karma). Artistic portraits depicting events from the scriptures were also quite popular during this era. They were used to generate merit as well as to preach and teach the doctrine. The "Enshrined Sutra of the Taira Family" (Heikenōkyō), is one of the greatest examples of Buddhist visual art from this period. It is an elaborately illustrated Lotus Sūtra installed at Itsukushima Shrine.[54]

The Buddhist liturgy of this era also became more elaborate and performative. Rites such as the Repentance Assembly (keka'e) at Hōjōji developed to include elaborate music, dance and other forms of performance. Major temples and monasteries such as the royal Hosshōji temple and Kōfukuji, also became home to the performance of Sarugaku theater (which is the origin of Nō Drama) as well as ennen ("longevity-enhancing") arts which included dances and music. Doctrinally, these performative arts were seen as skillful means (hōben, Skt. upaya) of teaching Buddhism. Monks specializing in such arts were called yūsō ("artistic monks").[55]

Another way of communicating the Buddhist message was through the medium of poetry, which included both Chinese poetry (kanshi) and Japanese poetry (waka). An example of Buddhist themed waka is Princess Senshi's (964–1035) Hosshin waka shū (Collection of Waka of the Awakening Mind, 1012). The courtly practice of rōei (performing poetry to music) was also taken up in the Tendai and Shingon lineages. Both monks and laypersons met in poetry circles (kadan) like the Ninnaji circle which was patronized by Prince Shukaku (1150–1202).[56]

Kamakura Buddhism (1185–1333) - new schools of Buddhism edit

The Kamakura period (1185–1333) was a period of crisis in which the control of the country moved from the imperial aristocracy to the samurai. In 1185 the Kamakura shogunate was established at Kamakura.[57]

 
An illustration of Hōnen preaching
 
Ninshō

This period saw the development of new Buddhist lineages or schools which have been called "Kamakura Buddhism" and "New Buddhism". All of the major founders of these new lineages were ex-Tendai monks who had trained at Mt. Hiei and had studied the exoteric and esoteric systems of Tendai Buddhism. During the Kamakura period, these new schools did not gain as much prominence as the older lineages, with the possible exception of the highly influential Rinzai Zen school.[58]

The new schools include Pure Land lineages like Hōnen's (1133–1212) Jōdo shū and Shinran's (1173–1263) Jōdo Shinshū, both of which focused on the practice of chanting the name of Amida Buddha. These new Pure Land schools both believed that Japan had entered the era of the decline of the Dharma (mappō) and that therefore other Buddhist practices were not useful. The only means to liberation was now the faithful chanting of the nembutsu.[59] This view was critiqued by more traditional figures such as Myō'e (1173–1232).

Another response to the social instability of the period was an attempt by certain monks to return to the proper practice of Buddhist precepts as well as meditation. These figures include figures like the Kōfukuji monk Jōkei (1155–1213) and the Tendai monk Shunjō (1166–1227), who sought to return to the traditional foundations of the Buddhist path, ethical cultivation and meditation practice.[60]

Other monks attempted to minister to marginalized low class groups. The Kegon-Shingon monk Myō'e was known for opening his temple to lepers, beggars, and other marginal people, while precept masters such as Eison (1201–1290) and Ninshō (1217–1303) were also active in ministering and caring for ill and marginalized persons, particularly those outcast groups termed "non-persons" (hinin). Deal & Ruppert (2015) p. 122 Ninshō established a medical facility at Gokurakuji in 1287, which treated more than 88,000 people over a 34-year-period and collected Chinese medical knowledge.[61]

Another set of new Kamakura schools include the two major Zen schools of Japan (Rinzai and Sōtō), promulgated by monks such as Eisai and Dōgen, which emphasize liberation through the insight of meditation (zazen). Dōgen (1200–1253) began a prominent meditation teacher and abbot. He introduced the Chan lineage of Caodong, which would grow into the Sōtō school. He criticized ideas like the final age of the Dharma (mappō), and the practice of apotropaic prayer.[62]

 
A 20th century depiction of the banishment of Nichiren in 1261.

Additionally, it was during this period that monk Nichiren (1222–1282) began teaching his exclusively Lotus Sutra based Buddhism, which he saw as the only valid object of devotion in the age of mappō. Nichiren believed that the conflicts and disasters of this period were caused by the wrong views of Japanese Buddhists (such as the followers of Pure Land and esoteric Buddhism).[63] Nichiren faced much opposition for his views and was also attacked and exiled twice by the Kamakura state.

Muromachi period (1336-1573) and Azuchi–Momoyama period (1573-1603) edit

Late Medieval Buddhism (1336–1467) edit

During this period, the new "Kamakura schools" continued to develop and began to consolidate themselves as unique and separate traditions. However, as Deal and Ruppert note, "most of them remained at the periphery of Buddhist institutional power and, in some ways, discourse during this era."[64] They further add that it was only "from the late fifteenth century onward that these lineages came to increasingly occupy the center of Japanese Buddhist belief and practice." The only exception is Rinzai Zen, which attained prominence earlier (13th century).[65] Meanwhile, the "old" schools and lineages continued to develop in their own ways and remained influential.[65]

The new schools' independence from the old schools did not happen all at once. In fact, the new schools remained under the old schools' doctrinal and political influence for some time. For example, Ōhashi Toshio has stressed how during this period, the Jōdo sect was mainly seen as a subsidiary or temporary branch sect of Tendai. Furthermore, not all monks of the old sects were antagonistic to the new sects.[66]

During the height of the medieval era, political power was decentralized and shrine-temple complexes were often competing with each other for influence and power. These complexes often controlled land and multiple manors, and also maintained military forces of warrior monks which they used to battle with each other.[67] In spite of the instability of this era, the culture of Buddhist study and learning continued to thrive and grow.[68]

Furthermore, though there were numerous independent Buddhist schools and lineages at this time, many monks did not exclusively belong to one lineage and instead traveled to study and learn in various temples and seminaries. This tendency of practicing in multiple schools or lineages was termed shoshū kengaku. It became much more prominent in the medieval era due to the increased social mobility that many monks enjoyed.[69]

 
The main gate of Tōfuku-ji, the oldest sanmon in Japan.

Both the Kamakura shogunate (1192–1333) and the Ashikaga shogunate (1336–1573) supported and patronized the "Five Mountains culture" (Gozan Jissetsu Seido) of Rinzai Zen. This Rinzai Zen tradition was centered on the ten "Five Mountain" temples (five in Kyoto and five in Kamakura). Besides teaching zazen meditation, they also pursued studies in esoteric Buddhism and in certain art forms like calligraphy and poetry. A pivotal early figure of Rinzai was Enni Ben'en (1202–1280), a high-ranking and influential monk who was initiated into Tendai and Shingon. He then traveled to China to study Zen and later founded Tōfukuji.[68]

The Tendai and Shingon credentials of Rinzai figures such as Enni show that early Zen was not a lineage that was totally separate from the other "old" schools.[70] Indeed, Zen monastic codes feature procedures for "worship of the Buddha, funerals, memorial rites for ancestral spirits, the feeding of hungry ghosts, feasts sponsored by donors, and tea services that served to highlight the bureaucratic and social hierarchy."[71]

 
Tenryū-ji's Sōgen Pond, designed by Musō Soseki.

Medieval Rinzai was also invigorated by a series of Chinese masters who came to Japan during the Song dynasty, such as Issan Ichinei (1247–1317). Issan influenced the Japanese interest in Chinese literature, calligraphy and painting. The Japanese literature of the Five Mountains (Gozan Bungaku) reflects this influence. One of his students was Musō Soseki, a Zen master, calligraphist, poet and garden designer who was granted the title "national Zen teacher" by Emperor Go-Daigo.[72] The Zen monk poets Sesson Yūbai and Kokan Shiren also studied under Issan.[73] Shiren was also a historian who wrote the Buddhist history Genkō shakusho.

The Royal court and elite families of the capital also studied the classic Chinese arts that were being taught in the five mountain Rinzai temples. The shogunal families even built Zen temples in their residential palaces. The five mountain temples also established their own printing program (Gozan-ban) to copy and disseminate a wide variety of literature that included records of Zen masters, the writings of Tang poets, Confucian classics, Chinese dictionaries, reference works, and medical texts.[74]

 
The Hansōbō shrine, a Shinto shrine at the Rinzai temple of Kenchō-ji.

It is also during this period that true lineages of "Shintō" kami worship begin to develop in Buddhist temples complexes, lineages which would become the basis for institutionalized Shintō of later periods. Buddhists continued to develop theories about the relationship between kami and the Buddhas and bodhisattvas. One such idea, gongen ("provisional manifestation"), promoted the worship of kami as manifest forms of the Buddhas.[75] A group of Tendai monks at Mt. Hiei meanwhile incorporated hongaku thought into their worship of the kami Sannō, which eventually came to be seen as the source or "original ground" (honji) of all Buddhas (thereby reversing the old honji suijaku theory which saw the Buddha as the honji). This idea can be found in the work of the Hiei monk Sonshun (1451–1514).[76]

Late Muromachi-Period Buddhism (1467–1603) - Ōnin War edit

 
Kinkaku-ji, ("the Temple of the Golden Pavilion'), is a Rinzai Zen temple built in the Muromachi period (c. 1397) and destroyed during the Onin War (it was later rebuilt).

Beginning with the devastating Ōnin War (1467–1477), the late Muromachi period saw the devolution of central government control and the rise of regional samurai warlords called daimyōs and the so called "warring states era" (Sengokuki). During this era of widespread warfare, many Buddhist temples and monasteries were destroyed, particularly in and around Kyoto. Many of these old temples would not be rebuilt until the 16th and 17th centuries.[77]

During this period, the new Kamakura schools rose to a new level of prominence and influence. They also underwent reforms in study and practice which would make them more independent and would last centuries. For example, it was during this period that the True Pure Land monk Rennyo (1415–1499) forged a large following for his school and rebuilt Honganji. He reformed devotional practices with a focus on Shinran and honzon scrolls inscribed with the nembutsu. He also made widespread use of the Japanese vernacular.[78]

The Zen lineages were also widely disseminated throughout the country during this era. A key contributing factor to their spread (as well as to the spread of Pure Land temples) was their activity in funerals and mortuary rituals. Some temple halls were reconstructed with a focus on mortuary rites (sometimes for a specific family, like the Tokugawa) and were thus known as mortuary temples (bodaiji).[79] Furthermore, during this era, schools like Soto Zen, the Hokke (Nichiren) schools and Rennyo's Pure land school also developed comprehensive curricula for doctrinal study, which allowed them to become more self sufficient and independent schools and eliminated the need for their monks to study with other schools.[80]

There was also a decrease in the ritual schedule of the royal court. Because of this, Buddhist Temples which did survive this period had to turn to new ways of fundraising. Aside from mortuary duties, this also included increasing public viewings (kaichos) of hidden or esoteric images.[81]

 
A model of Ishiyama Hongan-ji in Osaka, one of the main fortress-temple complex of the True Pure Land (Jōdo Shinshū) "Devoted League" (Ikko-Ikki).
 
The Battle of Ishiyama Hongan-ji, by Utagawa Yoshifuji

This era also saw the rise of militant Buddhist leagues (ikki), like the Ikko Ikki ("Single Minded" Pure Land Leagues) and Hokke Ikki (Nichirenist "Lotus" Leagues), who rose in revolt against samurai lords and established self-rule in certain regions. These leagues would also sometimes go to war with each other and with major temples. The Hokke Ikki managed to destroy the Ikko Ikki's Yamashina Honganji temple complex and take over much of Kyoto in the 1530s. They eventually came into conflict with the Tendai warrior monks of Enryakuji in what became known as the Tenbun Period War, in which all 21 major Hokke (Nichiren) temples were destroyed, along with much of Kyoto.[82]

The Tendai warrior monks and the Ikko Ikki leagues remained a major political power in Japan until their defeat at the hands of Oda Nobunaga (1534–1582), who subjugated both the Tendai monks at Mt Hiei and then the Ikko Ikki, in the Ishiyama Honganji War (1570–1580) .[83]

During the mid-sixteenth century westerners first began to arrive in Japan, introducing new technologies, as well as Christianity. This led to numerous debates between Christians and Buddhists, such as the so-called "Yamaguchi sectarian debates" (yamaguchi no shūron).[82]

Edo (Tokugawa)-Period (1603–1868) edit

After the Sengoku period of war, Japan was re-united by the Tokugawa Shogunate (1600–1868) who ran the country through a feudal system of regional daimyō. The Tokugawa also banned most foreigners from entering the country. The only traders to be allowed were the Dutch at the island of Dejima.[84]

During the seventeenth century, the Tokugawa shōgun Iemitsu set into motion a series of reforms which sought to increase state control of religion (as well as to eliminate Christianity). Iemitsu's reforms developed what has been called the head–branch system (hon-matsu seido) and the temple affiliation system (jidan; alt. danka seido). This system made use of already existing Buddhist institutions and affiliations, but attempted to bring them under official government control and required all temples to be affiliated with a government recognized lineage.[85] In general, the Tendai, Pure Land, and Shingon sects were treated more favourably than the True Pure Land and Nichiren sects because the latter had a history of inciting socio-political disturbances in the 16th century.[86]

Buddhist leaders often worked with the government, providing religious support for their rule. For example, the Zen monk Takuan Sōhō (1573–1645) suggested that the spirit of Tokugawa Ieyasu, was a kami (divine spirit). He also wrote a book on zen and martial arts (The Unfettered Mind) addressed to the samurai. Meanwhile, Suzuki Shōsan would even call the Tokugawa shōgun a "holy king" (shōō).[87]

In the Edo period, Buddhist institutions procured funding through various ritual means, such as the sale of talismans, posthumous names and titles, prayer petitions, and medicine.[88] The practice of pilgrimage was also prominent in the Edo Period. Many temples and holy sites like Mt. Kōya, Mt. Konpira and Mt. Ōyama (Sagami Province) hosted Buddhist pilgrims and mountain ascetics throughout the era.[89]

 
Portrait of Chinese monk Yinyuan (Ingen), who founded the Ōbaku school

During the 17th century, the Ōbaku lineage of Zen would be introduced by Ingen, a Chinese monk. Ingen had been a member of the Linji school in Ming China. This lineage, which promoted the dual practice of zazen and nembutsu, would be very successful, having over a thousand temples by the mid-18th century.[87]

Meanwhile, a new breed of public preachers was beginning to frequent public spaces and develop new forms of preaching. These include Pure Land monk Sakuden (1554–1642), who is seen as an originator of Rakugo humor and wrote the Seisuishō (Laughs to Wake You Up), which is a collection of humorous anecdotes. Other traveling preachers of the era who made use of stories and narratives include the Shingon-Ritsu monk Rentai (1663–1726) and the Pure Land monk Asai Ryōi (d. 1691).[90]

Hakuin Ekaku (1685–1768) laid a strong emphasis on kōan training as the original pedagogical means of his tradition, combining it with a somatic practice by drawing on ideas from Chinese medicine and Daoism. Hakuin also criticized the mixing of Zen and Pure Land.[91] His views became influential in the Meji-period (1868–1912), when his dharma-heirs came to dominate the Japanese Rinzai-school.

 
Making Prints, by Hosoki Toshikazu c. 1879
 
Illustration of a book published in 1814

During the Edo period, there was an unprecedented growth of print publishing (in part due to the support of the Tokugawa regime), and the creation and sale of printed Buddhist works exploded. The Tendai monk Tenkai, supported by Iemitsu, led the printing of the Buddhist "canon" (issaikyō, i.e. The Tripiṭaka). Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 184–186 Also notable was the publication of an exceptionally high quality reprint of the Ming-era Tripiṭaka by Tetsugen Doko, a renowned master of the Ōbaku school.[92] An important part of the publishing boom were books of Buddhist sermons called kange-bon or dangi-bon.[89]

With the support of the Shogunate, Buddhist scholasticism also thrived during the Edo period, and the major Buddhist schools established new systems of scholastic study in their schools' seminaries (danrin).[88] Examples include the 18 Jōdo school danrin in Kantō, which were patronized by the Tokugawa family, the most prominent being Zōjōji. The True Pure Land lineages established an extensive seminary system which constituted what would eventually become Ryūkoku University. There was also a renaissance of Sanskrit studies in the Shingon school, led by figures such as Jōgon (1639–1702) and Jiun Sonja (1718–1804). Meanwhile, in Sōtō Zen, scholars led by Menzan Zuihō (1683–1769) undertook a major attempt to publish and study the works of Dōgen.[93]

Also during this time there was a widespread movement among many Buddhist sects to return to the proper use of Buddhist precepts. Numerous figures in the Ōbaku, Shingon, Shingon-risshū, Nichiren, Jōdo shū and Soto schools participated in this effort to tighten and reform Buddhist ethical discipline.[93]

Meiji period (1868–1912) edit

 
Buddhist temple bells being smelted for bronze during the haibutsu kishaku

After the Meiji Restoration in 1868, the new imperial government adopted a strong anti-Buddhist attitude. A new form of pristine Shinto, shorn of all Buddhist influences, was promoted as the state religion, an official state policy known as shinbutsu bunri (separating Buddhism from Shinto), which began with the Kami and Buddhas Separation Order (shinbutsu hanzenrei) of 1868.[94] The ideologues of this new Shinto sought to return to a pure Japanese spirit, before it was "corrupted" by external influences, mainly Buddhism. They were influenced by national study (kokugaku) figures like Motoori Norinaga (1730–1801) and Hirata Atsutane (1776–1843), both of whom strongly criticized Buddhism.[95] The new order dismantled the combined temple-shrine complexes that had existed for centuries. Buddhists priests were no longer able to practice at Shinto shrines and Buddhist artifacts were removed from Shinto shrines.[96]

This sparked a popular and often violent movement to eradicate Buddhism, which was seen as backwards and foreign and associated with the corrupt Shogunate. There had been much pent-up anger among the populace because the Tokugawa danka system forced families to affiliate themselves with a Buddhist temple, which included the obligation of monetary donations. Many Buddhist temples abused this system to make money, causing an undue burden on their parishioners.[97][98]

This religious persecution of Buddhism, known as haibutsu kishaku (literally: "abolish Buddhism and destroy Shākyamuni"), saw the destruction and closure of many Buddhist institutions throughout Japan as well as the confiscation of their land, the forced laicization of Buddhist monks and the destruction of Buddhist books and artifacts.[99] In some instances, monks were attacked and killed.[96]

The violence spread to every region of the country. Japanologist Martin Collcutt believes Japanese Buddhism was on the verge of total eradication.[100] It is estimated that 40,000 Buddhist temples were destroyed, and in certain places the percentage of Buddhist temples destroyed reached 80%.[101] The intensity of the destruction depended on the region, and the most violent times of haibutsu kishaku lasted between 1869 and 1871.

The government edict of April 1872 ended the status of the Buddhist precepts as state law and allowed monks to marry, to eat meat and stopped the regulation of tonsure and dress.[102] The result of this law (over the course of about four decades) was that most Buddhist priests in Japan marry and many temples became hereditary holdings within a family.[103]

Anti-Buddhist government policies and religious persecution put many Buddhist institutions on the defensive against those who saw it as the enemy of the Japanese people.[104][105] This led Japanese Buddhist institutions to re-examine and re-invent the role of Buddhism in a modernizing Japanese state which now supported state Shintō.[105] There were a broad range of reform strategies and movements which aimed at positioning Buddhism as a useful partner to a modernizing Japan. This included clerical reform to tighten discipline as well as reforms concerning doctrine and practice. Some Buddhists sought to modernize Buddhist thought by combining it with Western science and philosophy.[103]

This reformed "new Buddhism" (shin bukkyō) was often promoted by laypersons, such as Sakaino Kōyō (1871–1933) and Takashima Beihō (1875–1949) who founded the Shin Bukkyōto Dōshikai (New Buddhist Friends' Association) in 1899 and promoted social justice activities.[106] The New Buddhists often joined Japanese nationalist patriotism with Buddhist virtues. Some new Buddhist organizations fully embraced Japanese nationalism, such as the Kokuchūkai (Pillar of the Nation Society) of Tanaka Chigaku (1861–1939), who promoted Japanese Imperialism as a way to spread the message of the Lotus Sutra. Another new Buddhist society was the Keii-kai (Woof and Warp Society, founded in 1894), which was critical of doctrinal rigidity of traditional Buddhism and championed what they termed "free investigation" (jiyū tōkyū) as a way to respond to the rapid changes of the time.[107]

Kiyozawa Manshi's Seishin-shugi (Spiritualism) movement promoted the idea that Buddhists should focus on self-cultivation without relying on organized Buddhism or the state. Kiyozawa and his friends lived together in a commune called Kōkōdō (Vast Cavern), and published a journal called Seishinkai (Spiritual World).[106] Other Buddhists focused on adherence to the ten precepts, such as Shaku Unshō who created formed a lay organization known as the Jūzen-kai (Association for the Ten Precepts).[108]

An influential figure of Buddhist reform during this period was the philosopher Inoue Enryō (1858–1919). A graduate of Tokyo Imperial University, he is known for his critique of Christianity as well as for his ideas on reforming Buddhist institutions. He sought to interpret Buddhist thought through a more rational lens and drew on Western philosophy as well as the teachings of the historical Buddha to do so. He was a prolific author of around 120 books, including Shinri kinshin (The Guiding Principle of Truth) and Bukkyō katsu ron (Enlivening Buddhism). In 1904 he inaugurated the Tetsugaku-dō (Hall of Philosophy), which was dedicated to Shakyamuni, Confucius, Socrates, and Kant. He also advocated for social welfare activities.[109]

It was also during the Meiji era that Japanese Buddhist studies as an academic field began. This was sparked by the overseas travel of Japanese scholars to Western universities and encountered Buddhist textual studies there, particularly the study of Indian Buddhism and its languages (Sanskrit and Pali). This led to some Japanese Buddhists to question the orthodoxy of Japanese Buddhist traditions.[110] However, the Japanese government at this time was hesitant to give Buddhism any significant influence over public education, and as a result Buddhist studies was classed under philosophy rather than religion, and terms such as "Indian studies" was favoured over "Buddhist studies."[111]

One of the first such Japanese academics was Nanjō Bunyū (1849–1927), who studied Sanskrit at Oxford with Max Müller and later took a position at Tokyo Imperial University. Meanwhile, Murakami Senshō (1851–1929) focused on the study of Sanskrit and Pali texts and the history of Buddhism. He focused on the universal values of world Buddhism and wrote critically regarding the historical bias of Japanese Buddhism in works such as Daijō bussetsu ron hihan (A Critique of the Theory that Mahayana Is the Direct Teaching of the Historical Buddha, 1903).[112]

There were also a number of new Buddhist movements that grew popular in the Meiji period through 1945. Some of the most influential of these were the Nichirenist/Lotus movements of Sōka Gakkai, Reiyūkai, and Risshō Kōseikai. They focused on active proselytization and worldly personal benefits.[112]

War time Buddhism (1931–1945) edit

During the "fifteen year war" (beginning with the invasion of Manchuria in 1931 and ending with the surrender of Japan in 1945), most Japanese Buddhist institutions supported militarization of Japan.[113][114][115][116][117][118][119]

Japanese Buddhist support for imperialism and militarism was rooted in the Meiji era need for Buddhists to show that they were good citizens that were relevant to Japan's efforts to modernize and become a major power. Some Buddhists, like Tanaka Chigaku, saw the war as a way to spread Buddhism. During the Russo-Japanese War, Buddhist leaders supported the war effort in different ways, such as by providing chaplains to the army, performing rituals to secure victory and working with the families of fallen soldiers. During the fifteen-year war, Japanese Buddhists supported the war effort in similar ways, and Buddhist priests became attached to Imperial army regiments.[120]

The Myōwakai (Society for Light and Peace), a transsectarian Buddhist organization, was a strong supporter of the war effort who promoted the idea of "benevolent forcefulness" which held that "war conducted for a good reason is in accord with the great benevolence and compassion of Buddhism."[120] Another right-wing Buddhist organization during the war was Nisshō Inoue's terrorist organization "league of blood" (ketsumeidan), which attempted to carry out a series of assassinations, culminating in the assassination of Prime Minister Inukai Tsuyoshi, an event known as the "May 15 Incident".

During the war, the Japanese government sought to further tighten its control over Buddhist institutions. They attempted to force Buddhist schools to remove from their doctrines any language or idea that revealed anything less than full allegiance to the emperor or that diminished the significance of Shintō kami. This included parts of the writings of medieval Buddhist founders like Shinran and Nichiren who had written that it is sometimes good to criticize rulers if they go against the Dharma.[121]

Buddhists were also forced to venerate talismans from the Isse Shrine, and there were serious consequences for those who refused. For example, during the 1940s, "leaders of both Honmon Hokkeshu and Sōka Gakkai were imprisoned for their defiance of wartime government religious policy, which mandated display of reverence for state Shinto."[122][123][124] A few individuals who directly opposed war were targeted by the government. These include the Rinzai priest Ichikawa Hakugen,[125] and Itō Shōshin (1876–1963), a former Jōdo Shinshū priest.[121]

Japanese Buddhism since 1945 edit

At the end of the World War II, Japan was devastated by the allied bombing campaigns, with most cities in ruins. The occupation government abolished state Shinto, establishing freedom of religion and a separation of religion and state which became an official part of the Japanese constitutional amendment in 1947.[126]

This meant that Buddhist temples and institutions were now free to associate with any religious lineage or to become independent if doctrinal or administrative differences proved too much. One example is when Hōryūji temple became independent from the Hossō lineage and created its own Shōtoku denomination.[127]

The Japanese populace was aware of Buddhist involvement in aiding and promoting the war effort. Because of this, Buddhist lineages have engaged in acts of repentance for their wartime activities. Buddhist groups have been active in the post-war peace movement.[127]

Buddhist temples in post-war Japan experienced difficult times. There was much damage to be repaired and there was little funding for it. In the 1950s, the situation slowly improved, especially for those temples that could harness tourism and other ways of procuring funding. However, post-war land reforms and an increasingly mobile and urban population meant that temples lost both parishioners and land holdings.[128]

In the 1960s, many temples were focused solely on providing services like funerals and burials. In 1963, Tamamuro Taijō coined the term sōshiki bukkyō (funerary Buddhism), to describe the ritualistic formalism of temple Buddhism in postwar Japan that was often divorced from people's spiritual needs.[129] Post-war Japan has seen a decline in traditional temple Buddhism, with roughly 100 Buddhist organizations disappearing every year.[130][131] Still, around 90% of Japanese funerals are conducted according to Buddhist rites.[132]

 
Soka Gakkai's Tokyo headquarters
 
Vowz Band (A group of Buddhist monks who use rock music to spread message[133])

During the post-war period, in contrast to traditional temple Buddhism, Buddhist based Japanese new religions grew rapidly, especially the Nichiren/Lotus Sūtra based movements like Sōka Gakkai and Risshō Kōseikai (which are today the largest lay Buddhist organizations in Japan).[134] Soka Gakkai "... grew rapidly in the chaos of post war Japan[124] from about 3000 members in 1951 to over 8 million members" in 2000,[135] and has established schools, colleges and a university, as well as cultural institutions.[136]

A study about the reason for the growth in lay believers and increased engagement in society attributes the cause to Nichiren teachings of 'social responsibility': "In the tradition of Nichiren Buddhism, however, we find the Lotus Sutra linked to a view of social responsibility that is distinctive".[137] According to an academic study, lay believers of Buddhism "... offer an alternative view of Japan where their form of Buddhism would form the religious foundation of a peaceful and psychologically and materially enriched society".[138]

In the 1970s, during a period of rapid social and economic change, there was a wave of new religious movements that were called "new new religions" (shin shin shūkyō). While the new religions tended to be Nichiren focused, the "new new" Buddhist religions tend to be influenced by numerous other Buddhist traditions. Buddhist new new religions include the Agon shū (Āgama School), Gedatsukai (Enlightenment Society, drawing from Shingon and Shinto), and Shinnyoen (Garden of True Thusness, a Shingon-based religion).[139] Aum Shinrikyō, the most notorious of these new new religions, is a dangerous cult responsible for the Tokyo gas attack.

The post-war era also saw a new philosophical movements among Buddhist intellectuals called the Kyoto school, since it was led by a group of Kyoto University professors, mainly Nishida Kitarō (1870–1945), Tanabe Hajime (1885–1962), and Nishitani Keiji (1900–1991). These thinkers drew from Western philosophers like Kant, Hegel and Nietzsche and Buddhist thought to express a new perspective. Another intellectual field that has attracted interest is Critical Buddhism (hihan bukkyō), associated with Sōtō Zen priests like Hakamaya Noriaki (b. 1943) and Matsumoto Shirō (b. 1950), who criticized certain key ideas in Japanese Mahayana (mainly Buddha nature and original enlightenment) as being incompatible with the Buddha's not-self doctrine. Critical Buddhists have also examined the moral failings of Japanese Buddhism, such as support for nationalist violence and social discrimination.[140]

Japanese Buddhist schools edit

 
Portable shrine from the 1600s with 30 guardian deities and an invocation to the Lotus Sutra. Buddhism and kami worship were closely associated in Japan until they were separated in the late 1800s

Japanese Buddhism is very diverse with numerous independent schools and temple lineages (including the "old" Nara schools and the "new" Kamakura schools) that can be traced back to ancient and medieval Japan, as well as more recent Japanese New Religious movements and modern lay organizations.

According to the religious statistics of 2023 by the Agency for Cultural Affairs of Japan, the religious corporation under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology in Japan had 129 million believers, of which 46 million were Buddhists and most of them were believers of new schools of Buddhism which were established in the Kamakura period (1185-1333). The number of believers of each sect is approximately 22 million for Pure Land Buddhism, 10 million for Nichiren Buddhism, 5.4 million for Shingon Buddhism, 5.2 million for Zen Buddhism, 2.8 million for Tendai Buddhism, and only about 700,000 for the old schools, which were established in the Nara period (710-794).[6]

An old saying regarding the schools of Buddhism in relation to the different classes is:

The Tendai is for the royal family, the Shingon for the nobility, the Zen for the warrior classes, and the Jodo for the masses.[141]

Nara Buddhism edit

 
Kōfuku-ji, the national headquarters of the Hossō school.
 
Tōdai-ji, the head temple of the Kegon school
 
The Golden Hall (kondō) at Yakushi-ji

The Six Nara Schools are the oldest Buddhist schools in Japan.[142] These schools came to Japan from Korea and China during the late 6th and early 7th centuries. They are associated with the ancient capital of Heijō-kyō (present-day Nara), where they founded the famed "seven great temples of the southern capital" (Nanto Shichi Daiji 南都七大寺).

Heian Buddhism edit

Eventually, the increasing power of Six Nara Schools and their influence in politics started to overwhelm the city of Nara. This forced Emperor Kanmu to relocate the capital, moving it to Heian-kyō (present-day Kyoto). It also directly encouraged the creation of the Tendai school, founded by Saichō, and the Shingon school, founded by Kūkai.

Additionally, this period saw the development of Shugendō, an eclectic tradition which brought together Buddhist and ancient Shinto elements. It was founded by En no Gyōja (役行者, "En the ascetic").

Kamakura Buddhism edit

 
Chion-in, the head temple of Jōdo-shū.
 
A traditional map of Eihei-ji, the main temple of the Sōtō school.
 
A print of the Nichiren Shū temple Ikegami Honmon-ji by Hiroshige.
 
Bodhidharma (Chinese: 達磨; Hiragana: だるま; Rōmaji: Daruma), painted by Miyamoto Musashi, swordsman artist and philosopher close to Takuan Soho monk of the Rinzai school (linked to the samurai caste) founded by the 28th Patriarch.

During the Kamakura period, many Buddhist schools (classified by scholars as "New Buddhism" or Shin Bukkyo), as opposed to "Old Buddhism" (Kyū Bukkyō).

Japanese New Religious Movements edit

There are various Japanese New Religious movements which can be considered Buddhist sects, the largest of these are lay Nichiren Buddhist groups such as Soka Gakkai, Reiyūkai, Risshō Kōsei-kai and lay Zen Buddhist groups such as Sanbo Kyodan and FAS Society. But there are other new movements such as Agon Shū (阿含宗, "Agama School"), a Buddhist school which focuses on studying the Agamas, a collection of early Buddhist scriptures.

Cultural influence edit

Societal influence edit

During the Kamakura (1185–1333) and Muromachi (1336–1573) Buddhism, or the Buddhist institutions, had a great influence on Japanese society. Buddhist institutions were used by the shogunate to control the country. During the Edo (1600–1868) this power was constricted, to be followed by persecutions at the beginning of the Meiji era (1868–1912).[84] Buddhist temples played a major administrative role during the Edo period, through the Danka or terauke system. In this, Japanese citizens were required to register at their local Buddhist temples and obtain a certification (terauke), which became necessary to function in society. At first, this system was put into place to suppress Christianity, but over time it took on the larger role of census and population control.

Artistic influence edit

 
Iconographical evolution of the Wind God.
Left: Greek wind god from Hadda, Afghanistan, 2nd century.
Middle: wind god from Kizil Caves, Tarim Basin, 7th century.
Right: Japanese wind god Fūjin, 17th century.

In Japan, Buddhist art started to develop as the country converted to Buddhism in 548. Some tiles from the Asuka period (shown above), the first period following the conversion of the country to Buddhism, display a strikingly classical style, with ample Hellenistic dress and realistically rendered body shape characteristic of Greco-Buddhist art.

Buddhist art became extremely varied in its expression. Many elements of Greco-Buddhist art remain to this day however, such as the Hercules inspiration behind the Nio guardian deities in front of Japanese Buddhist temples, or representations of the Buddha reminiscent of Greek art such as the Buddha in Kamakura.[a]

Deities edit

 
Iconographical evolution from the Greek god Heracles to the Japanese god Shukongōshin. From left to right:
1) Heracles (Louvre Museum).
2) Heracles on coin of Greco-Bactrian king Demetrius I.
3) Vajrapani, the protector of the Buddha, depicted as Heracles in the Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara.
4) Shukongōshin, manifestation of Vajrapani, as protector deity of Buddhist temples in Japan.

Various other Greco-Buddhist artistic influences can be found in the Japanese Buddhist pantheon, the most striking being that of the Japanese wind god Fūjin. In consistency with Greek iconography for the wind god Boreas, the Japanese wind god holds above his head with his two hands a draping or "wind bag" in the same general attitude.[b] The abundance of hair has been kept in the Japanese rendering, as well as exaggerated facial features.

Another Buddhist deity, Shukongōshin, one of the wrath-filled protector deities of Buddhist temples in Japan, is also an interesting case of transmission of the image of the famous Greek god Heracles to East Asia along the Silk Road. Heracles was used in Greco-Buddhist art to represent Vajrapani, the protector of the Buddha, and his representation was then used in China and Japan to depict the protector gods of Buddhist temples.[c]

Artistic motifs edit

 
Vine and grape scrolls from Nara, 7th century.

The artistic inspiration from Greek floral scrolls is found quite literally in the decoration of Japanese roof tiles, one of the only remaining element of wooden architecture throughout centuries. The clearest ones are from the 7th century Nara temple building tiles, some of them exactly depicting vines and grapes. These motifs have evolved towards more symbolic representations, but essentially remain to this day in many Japanese traditional buildings.[d]

Architecture and Temples edit

Soga no Umako built Hōkō-ji, the first temple in Japan, between 588 and 596. It was later renamed as Asuka-dera for Asuka, the name of the capital where it was located. Unlike early Shinto shrines, early Buddhist temples were highly ornamental and strictly symmetrical. The early Heian period (9th–10th century) saw an evolution of style based on the mikkyō sects Tendai and Shingon Buddhism. The Daibutsuyō style and the Zenshūyō style emerged in the late 12th or early 13th century.

Buddhist holidays edit

The following Japanese Buddhist holidays are celebrated by most, if not all, major Buddhist traditions:[145]

Some holidays are specific to certain schools or traditions. For example, Zen Buddhist traditions celebrate Daruma-ki on October 15 to commemorate the life of Bodhidharma.

Demographics edit

According to the Japanese Government's Agency for Cultural Affairs estimate, as of 2018, with about 84 million or about 67% of the Japanese population, Buddhism was the religion in Japan with the most adherents, followed by Shinto, though a large number of people practice elements of both.[1] According to statistics by the Agency for Cultural Affairs in 2023, the religious corporation under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology in Japan had 129 million believers, of which 46 million were Buddhists. Most of them were believers of new schools of Buddhism which were established in the Kamakura period (1185-1333).[6] According to these statistics, the largest sects of Japanese Buddhism are the Jōdo Buddhists with 22 million believers, followed by the Nichiren Buddhists with 10 million believers.[6]

There are a wide range of estimates; the Pew Research Center estimated 36.2% of the population in 2010 practiced Buddhism.[146] The Japanese General Social Survey placed the figure at less than 20% of the population in 2017. The 2013 Japanese National Character Survey showed that roughly 70% of the population do not adhere to any religious beliefs.[2] Another survey indicates that about 60% of Japanese families have a butsudan (Buddhist shrine) in their homes.[147] In a 2012 Pew Research study, Japan has the third largest Buddhist population in the world, after China and Thailand.[148]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Katsumi Tanabe: "Needless to say, the influence of Greek art on Japanese Buddhist art, via the Buddhist art of Gandhara and India, was already partly known in, for example, the comparison of the wavy drapery of the Buddha images, in what was, originally, a typical Greek style" (Katsumi Tanabe, "Alexander the Great, East-West cultural contacts from Greece to Japan", p. 19)
  2. ^ >Katusmi Tanabe: "The Japanese wind god images do not belong to a separate tradition apart from that of their Western counter-parts but share the same origins. (...) One of the characteristics of these Far Eastern wind god images is the wind bag held by this god with both hands, the origin of which can be traced back to the shawl or mantle worn by Boreas/ Oado." (Katsumi Tanabe, "Alexander the Great, East-West cultural contacts from Greece to Japan", p. 21)
  3. ^ Katsumi Tanabe: "The origin of the image of Vajrapani should be explained. This deity is the protector and guide of the Buddha Sakyamuni. His image was modelled after that of Hercules. (...) The Gandharan Vajrapani was transformed in Central Asia and China and afterwards transmitted to Japan, where it exerted stylistic influences on the wrestler-like statues of the Guardian Deities (Nio)." (Katsumi Tanabe, "Alexander the Great, East-West cultural contacts from Greece to Japan", p. 23)
  4. ^ The transmission of the floral scroll pattern from West to East is presented in the regular exhibition of Ancient Japanese Art, at the Tokyo National Museum.

References edit

  1. ^ a b 宗教年鑑 令和5年版 [Religious Yearbook 2023] (PDF) (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs, Government of Japan. 2023-12-28. p. 35. Retrieved 2024-03-17.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  2. ^ a b Iwai, Noriko (11 October 2017). Measuring religion in Japan: ISM, NHK and JGSS (PDF) (Report). JGSS Research Center. (PDF) from the original on 11 November 2020. Retrieved 1 July 2020.
  3. ^ a b Bowring, Richard John (2005). The religious traditions of Japan, 500–1600. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. pp. 15–17. ISBN 0-521-85119-X.
  4. ^ a b Dykstra, Yoshiko Kurata; De Bary, William Theodore (2001). Sources of Japanese tradition. New York: Columbia University Press. p. 100. ISBN 0-231-12138-5.
  5. ^ Bowring, Richard John (2005). The religious traditions of Japan, 500–1600. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. pp. 16–17. ISBN 0-521-85119-X.
  6. ^ a b c d e "文化庁 宗教年鑑 令和5年版. p.51" (PDF). Agency for Cultural Affairs. 2023-12-28. Retrieved 2024-03-17.
  7. ^ Hoffman, Michael, "Buddhism's arrival, Shinto's endurance Archived 2012-07-17 at archive.today", The Japan Times, March 14, 2010, p. 7.
  8. ^ Holcombe, Charles (1999). "Trade-Buddhism: Maritime Trade, Immigration, and the Buddhist Landfall in Early Japan". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 119 (2): 280–292. doi:10.2307/606111. ISSN 0003-0279.
  9. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) p. 18
  10. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 21-23.
  11. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 19-22.
  12. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) p. 14.
  13. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 19-26.
  14. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 27-29.
  15. ^ Tyler, Royall, ed. (1987). Japanese Tales. Pantheon Fairy Tale and Folklore Library. Translated by Tyler, Royall (1st ed.). New York: Pantheon Books. pp. xxx. ISBN 978-0-394-52190-9.
  16. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 29-31.
  17. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 30-32.
  18. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 31-32.
  19. ^ a b Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 32-34.
  20. ^ a b Deal & Ruppert (2015) p. 45
  21. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) p. 46
  22. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 48-49
  23. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 49-50
  24. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) p. 50
  25. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) p. 51
  26. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) p. 53
  27. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 54-56
  28. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) p. 59
  29. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 55-56
  30. ^ Powers, John (2000). "Japanese Buddhism". A Concise Encyclopedia of Buddhism. Vol. 1. Oxford: Oneworld Publications. pp. 103–107.
  31. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) p. 56
  32. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) p. 58
  33. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 59-60
  34. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) p. 60
  35. ^ a b Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 60-61
  36. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 68-69
  37. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) p. 72
  38. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) p. 73
  39. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 68-71, 85
  40. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) p. 70
  41. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 68-70
  42. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) p. 87
  43. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 90-92
  44. ^ "Exoteric Buddhism, Esoteric Buddhism, and Shugendo - 顕教・密教・修験道". www.tendai-jimon.jp. Tendaijimon Sect. from the original on 21 December 2020. Retrieved 4 April 2024.
  45. ^ Masayasu Oda. . Archived from the original on 2 May 2019. Retrieved 4 April 2024.
  46. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 87, 91-93
  47. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 92-96
  48. ^ Snelling 1987, p. 178.
  49. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 91-93
  50. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 92-94
  51. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 95-97
  52. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 98-100
  53. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 87, 95-97
  54. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 99-102
  55. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 100-104
  56. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 101-103
  57. ^ Snelling 1987, p. 181.
  58. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 113-115
  59. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 117-118
  60. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) p. 121
  61. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 122-123
  62. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 123-124
  63. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 124-126
  64. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) p. 135
  65. ^ a b Deal & Rupert (2015) pp. 135-136
  66. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 139-141
  67. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 136-137
  68. ^ a b Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 142-144
  69. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 151-153
  70. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 143-145
  71. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 143-146
  72. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 145-146
  73. ^ Louis-Frédéric, Käthe Roth. Japan encyclopedia. Harvard University Press, 2005. ISBN 0-674-01753-6, ISBN 978-0-674-01753-5 Стр. 402
  74. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 145-147
  75. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 149-151
  76. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 149-152
  77. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) p. 172
  78. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 176-179
  79. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 177-180
  80. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 179-182
  81. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 172-173
  82. ^ a b Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 179-181
  83. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 181-183
  84. ^ a b Snelling 1987.
  85. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 184-186
  86. ^ Makoto, Hayashi; Amstutz, Galen (2012). "General Education and the Modernization of Japanese Buddhism". The Eastern Buddhist. 43 (1/2): 137. ISSN 0012-8708. JSTOR 44362468. from the original on 2021-09-13. Retrieved 2021-09-13.
  87. ^ a b Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 188-190
  88. ^ a b Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 199-201
  89. ^ a b Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 193-195
  90. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 190-192
  91. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 189-191
  92. ^ Japan Buddhist Federation, Buddhanet "A Brief History of Buddhism in Japan", accessed 30/4/2012 2020-11-05 at the Wayback Machine
  93. ^ a b Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 200-202
  94. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 211-213
  95. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 210-211
  96. ^ a b Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 212-214
  97. ^ , Internet Archive
  98. ^ Nam-Lin Hur, Death and social order in Tokugawa Japan: Buddhism, anti-Christianity, and the danka system, Harvard University Asia Center, 2007; pp. 1-30 (The Rise of Funerary Buddhism in Tokugawa Japan).
  99. ^ Stone, Jacqueline (1993). "Reviewed work: Of Heretics and Martyrs in Meiji Japan: Buddhism and Its Persecution, James Edward Ketelaar". Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies. 53 (2): 582–598. doi:10.2307/2719461. JSTOR 2719461.
  100. ^ John Breen (July 2000). Mark Teeuwen (ed.). Shinto in History: Ways of the Kami. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. p. 230. ISBN 978-0-8248-2363-4. OCLC 43487317.
  101. ^ Jørn Borup (25 February 2008). Japanese Rinzai Zen Buddhism: Myōshinji, a living religion. p. 21. ISBN 9789047433095. from the original on 14 January 2023. Retrieved 19 January 2021.
  102. ^ Jaffe, Richard (1998). . Japanese Journal of Religious Studies. 24 (1–2): 46. Archived from the original on November 19, 2014.
  103. ^ a b Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 213-215.
  104. ^ Yoshiharu Tomatsu, : "The Priest as Profane Practitioner of the Sacred". Presented at the American Academy of Religion, Philadelphia, November 16, 1995
  105. ^ a b Deal & Ruppert (2015) p. 209.
  106. ^ a b Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 214-216
  107. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 214-218
  108. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 215-217
  109. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 216-218
  110. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 219-221
  111. ^ Makoto, Hayashi; Amstutz, Galen (2012). "General Education and the Modernization of Japanese Buddhism". The Eastern Buddhist. 43 (1/2): 141. ISSN 0012-8708. JSTOR 44362468. from the original on 2021-09-13. Retrieved 2021-09-13.
  112. ^ a b Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 220-222
  113. ^ Victoria 2006.
  114. ^ Gier, Nicholas, F. Buddhism and Japanese Nationalism: A sad chronicle of complicity 2016-10-10 at the Wayback Machine
  115. ^ Victoria, Brian Daizen (2010), "The "Negative Side" of D. T. Suzuki's Relationship to War" (PDF), The Eastern Buddhist, 41 (2): 97–138, (PDF) from the original on 2012-01-20, retrieved 2013-08-22
  116. ^ Stone, Jaquelin (2000). Japanese Lotus Millennialism. In: Wessinger, Catherine, Millennialism, Persecution and Violence, Syracuse University Press, p. 265
  117. ^ Otani Eiichi, "Missionary Activities of Nichiren Buddhism in East Asia", in: "Modern Japanese Buddhism and Pan-Asianism", The 19th World Congress of the International Association for the History of Religions, Tokyo, March 28, 2005, pp. 21–22
  118. ^ Kawase Takaya, "The Jodo Shinshu Sectś Missionary Work in Colonial Korea"; in: "Modern Japanese Buddhism and Pan-Asianism", The 19th World Congress of the International Association for the History of Religions, Tokyo, March 28, 2005, pp. 6–7
  119. ^ Klautau, Orion (2017). "The Question of Quintessence: Buddhism in Wartime Japanese Academia". Belief and Practice in Imperial Japan and Colonial Korea. Palgrave Macmillan: 137–152. from the original on 2019-10-28. Retrieved 2019-10-28.
  120. ^ a b Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 222–225
  121. ^ a b Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 224–226
  122. ^ Stone, Jaqueline I. (2003). In: Buswell, Robert E. ed. Encyclopedia of Buddhism, New York: Macmillan Reference Lib. ISBN 0028657187, p. 598
  123. ^ Métraux, Daniel A. (1986). "The Sōka Gakkai's search for the realization of the world of Risshō ankokuron". Japanese Journal of Religious Studies. 13 (1): 40. doi:10.18874/jjrs.13.1.1986.31-61. from the original on 2016-03-21.
  124. ^ a b Religion and American Cultures, An Encyclopedia, vol 1 p. 61 ISBN 157607238X
  125. ^ Ives, Christopher (2009). Imperial-Way Zen, University of Hawaiì Press
  126. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 231-232
  127. ^ a b Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 232-234
  128. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 232-233
  129. ^ Nika Efanova (2013), , B.A. Thesis, University of Iceland, School of Humanities, Japanese Language and Culture
  130. ^ by Norimitsu Onishi, International Herald Tribune, 14 July 2008
  131. ^ Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications (2013). Japan Statistical Yearbook 2014 (in Japanese). Tōkyō: Nihon Tōkei Kyōkai. from the original on 2013-12-05. Retrieved 2013-12-03.
  132. ^ . traditionscustoms.com. Archived from the original on 2017-06-27. Retrieved 2009-11-07.
  133. ^ BBC News "Japanese monks use rock music to spread message" (Tim Allman reports. 2013-07-03)
  134. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 233-235
  135. ^ "A Sect's Political Rise Creates Uneasiness in Japan". kenyon.edu. from the original on 2014-11-13. Retrieved 2013-10-13.
  136. ^ "Discover your potential 自分力の発見". soka.ac.jp. Soka University. from the original on 2013-10-05. Retrieved 2013-10-13.
  137. ^ Stone, Jacqueline I. (2002). "When Disobedience is Filial and Resistance is Loyal: The Lotus Sutra and Social Obligations in the Medieval Nichiren Tradition" (PDF). p. 262. (PDF) from the original on 2015-01-04. Retrieved 2020-10-20. Via "Articles on the Lotus Sutra, Tendai, and Nichiren Buddhism". Jacqueline I. Stone. Princeton University. from the original on 2015-01-04. Retrieved 2015-01-04.
  138. ^ The Soka Gakkai and Human Security, D. Metraux, p. 49, Virginia Review of Asian Studies, Mary Baldwin College
  139. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 235-237
  140. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 237-239
  141. ^ Hase, Mikiso (April 17, 2018). Premodern Japan: A Historical Survey. Routledge.
  142. ^ Deal & Ruppert (2015) pp. 56-57
  143. ^ Heinrich Dumoulin, James W. Heisig, Paul F. Knitter, Zen Buddhism : a History: Japan, p. 5. World Wisdom, Inc, 2005[ISBN missing]
  144. ^ Takakusu 2002, p. 76.
  145. ^ "List of Japanese Buddhist Holidays". japanlifeandreligion.com. from the original on 2010-11-04. Retrieved 19 January 2021.
  146. ^ "Global Religious Landscape: Buddhists". Pew Research Center. December 18, 2012. from the original on January 28, 2018. Retrieved July 1, 2020.
  147. ^ Japanese Saints: Mormons in the Land of the Rising Sun, John Patrick Hoffmann, Lexington Books, 2007 p. 37
  148. ^ "The Global Religious Landscape". Pew Research Center. December 2012. from the original on 26 December 2018. Retrieved 5 November 2018.

Bibliography edit

  • Buswell, Robert; Lopez, Donald S. (2013). The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-15786-3. from the original on 2023-01-14. Retrieved 2015-10-18.
  • Deal, William E.; Ruppert, Brian (2015). A Cultural History of Japanese Buddhism. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1405167017. from the original on 2023-01-14. Retrieved 2021-02-22.
  • Rahder, Johannes (January 1956). "Harivarman's Satyasiddhi-sastra". Philosophy East & West. 5 (4): 348. doi:10.2307/1396885. JSTOR 1396885.
  • Sharf, Robert H. (August 1993), "The Zen of Japanese Nationalism", History of Religions, 33 (1): 1–43, doi:10.1086/463354, S2CID 161535877, from the original on 2020-12-29, retrieved 2012-04-28
  • Shi, Zhangqing (2004). The Two Truths in Chinese Buddhism. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 978-81-208-2035-7.
  • Snelling, John (1987), The Buddhist handbook. A Complete Guide to Buddhist Teaching and Practice, London: Century Paperbacks
  • Takakusu, Junjirō (2002). The Essentials of Buddhist Philosophy. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 978-81-208-1592-6.
  • Tamura, Yoshiro (2005). Japanese Buddhism, A Cultural History. Kosei Publishing. ISBN 4-333-01684-3.
  • Victoria, Brian Daizen (2006), Zen at war (Second ed.), Lanham e.a.: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers

Further reading edit

  • Asakawa, K., and Henry Cabot Lodge (Ed.). Japan From the Japanese Government History.
  • Micah L. Auerback. A storied sage: canon and creation in the making of a Japanese Buddha. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2016.
  • Eliot, Sir Charles. Japanese Buddhism. London: Kegan Paul International, 2005. ISBN 0-7103-0967-8. Reprint of the 1935 original edition.
  • Bunyiu Nanjio (1886). A short history of the twelve Japanese Buddhist sects, Tokyo: Bukkyo-sho-ei-yaku-shupan-sha
  • Covell, Stephen (2001). . Comparative Religion Publications. Paper 1. (Dissertation, Western Michigan University)
  • Covell, Stephen G. (2006). "Japanese Temple Buddhism: Worldliness in a Religion of Renunciation", Univ of Hawaii. ISBN 0824829670
  • Melissa Anne-Marie Curley. Pure land, real world: modern Buddhism, Japanese leftists, and the utopian imagination. Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press, 2017.
  • Horii, Mitsutoshi (2006). , Electronic Journal of Contemporary Japanese Studies 6 (1), unpaginated
  • Kawanami, Hiroko: Japanese Nationalism and the Universal Dharma, in: Ian Harris (ed.): Buddhism and Politics in Twentieth-Century Asia. London/New York: Continuum, 1999, pp. 105–126. ISBN 978-0-8264-5178-1
  • Gereon Kopf, ed. The Dao companion to Japanese Buddhist philosophy. Dordrecht: Springer, 2019.
  • Matsunaga, Daigan; Matsunaga, Alicia (1996), Foundation of Japanese buddhism, Vol. 1: The Aristocratic Age, Los Angeles; Tokyo: Buddhist Books International. ISBN 0-914910-26-4
  • Matsunaga, Daigan, Matsunaga, Alicia (1996), Foundation of Japanese buddhism, Vol. 2: The Mass Movement (Kamakura and Muromachi Periods), Los Angeles; Tokyo: Buddhist Books International, 1996. ISBN 0-914910-28-0
  • Matsunami, Kodo (2004), (PDF), Tokyo: Japan Buddhist Federation, archived from the original (PDF) on February 2, 2013
  • Mark Rowe. Bonds of the dead: temples, burial, and the transformation of contemporary Japanese Buddhism. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2011.
  • James Mark Shields. Critical Buddhism: engaging with modern Japanese Buddhist thought. Farnham: Ashgate, 2011.

buddhism, japan, 日本の仏教, nihon, bukkyō, first, established, century, most, japanese, buddhists, belong, schools, buddhism, which, were, established, kamakura, period, 1185, 1333, during, tokugawa, period, 1603, 1868, buddhism, controlled, feudal, shogunate, mei. Buddhism in Japan 日本の仏教 Nihon no Bukkyō was first established in the 6th century CE 3 4 5 Most of the Japanese Buddhists belong to new schools of Buddhism which were established in the Kamakura period 1185 1333 6 During the Edo Tokugawa period 1603 1868 Buddhism was controlled by the feudal Shogunate The Meiji period 1868 1912 saw a strong response against Buddhism with persecution and a forced separation between Buddhism and Shinto Shinbutsu bunri Buddhism in Japan 日本の仏教The Great Buddha Amida Daibutsu at Kōtoku in Kamakura in Kanagawa Prefecture Japan National Treasure Total populationEstimates vary from c 71 million or 57 Government est 2022 1 to under 20 JGSS Research Center 2017 2 Regions with significant populationsThroughout JapanReligionsBuddhism mostly East Asian Buddhism LanguagesJapanese and other languages The largest sects of Japanese Buddhism are Pure Land Buddhism with 22 million believers followed by Nichiren Buddhism with 10 million believers Shingon Buddhism with 5 4 million Zen Buddhism with 5 3 million Tendai Buddhism with 2 8 million and only about 700 000 for the six old schools established in the Nara period 710 794 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early Buddhism 5th 13th century 1 1 1 Arrival and initial spread of Buddhism 1 1 2 Asuka Buddhism 552 645 1 1 3 Hakuhō Buddhism 645 710 1 1 4 Nara Buddhism 710 794 1 1 5 Early Heian Period Buddhism 794 950 1 1 6 Later Heian Period Buddhism 950 1185 1 2 Kamakura Buddhism 1185 1333 new schools of Buddhism 1 3 Muromachi period 1336 1573 and Azuchi Momoyama period 1573 1603 1 3 1 Late Medieval Buddhism 1336 1467 1 3 2 Late Muromachi Period Buddhism 1467 1603 Ōnin War 1 4 Edo Tokugawa Period 1603 1868 1 5 Meiji period 1868 1912 1 6 War time Buddhism 1931 1945 1 7 Japanese Buddhism since 1945 2 Japanese Buddhist schools 2 1 Nara Buddhism 2 2 Heian Buddhism 2 3 Kamakura Buddhism 2 4 Japanese New Religious Movements 3 Cultural influence 3 1 Societal influence 3 2 Artistic influence 3 2 1 Deities 3 2 2 Artistic motifs 3 3 Architecture and Temples 4 Buddhist holidays 5 Demographics 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Bibliography 9 Further readingHistory editEarly Buddhism 5th 13th century edit Arrival and initial spread of Buddhism edit Originating in India Buddhism arrived in Japan by first making its way to China and Korea through the Silk Road and then traveling by sea to the Japanese archipelago 7 Though often overlooked in western academia Buddhism was transmitted through trade routes across South East Asia in addition to the Sinophere 8 As such early Japanese Buddhism is strongly influenced by Chinese Buddhism and Korean Buddhism Though the official introduction of Buddhism to the country occurred at some point in the middle of the sixth century there were likely earlier contacts and attempts to introduce the religion Immigrants from the Korean Peninsula as well as merchants and sailors who frequented the mainland likely brought Buddhism with them independent of the transmission as recorded in court chronicles 9 Some Japanese sources mention this explicitly For example the Heian Period Fusō ryakki Abridged Annals of Japan mentions a foreigner known in Japanese as Shiba no Tatsuto who may have been Chinese born Baekje born or a descendant of an immigrant group in Japan He is said to have built a thatched hut in Yamato and enshrined an object of worship there Immigrants like this may have been a source for the Soga clan s later sponsorship of Buddhism 10 The Nihon Shoki Chronicles of Japan provides a date of 552 for when King Seong of Baekje now western South Korea sent a mission to Emperor Kinmei that included an image of the Buddha Shakyamuni ritual banners and sutras This event is usually considered the official introduction of Buddhism to Japan 4 3 Other sources however give the date of 538 and both dates are thought to be unreliable However it can still be said that in the middle of the sixth century Buddhism was introduced through official diplomatic channels 11 According to the Nihon Shoki after receiving the Buddhist gifts the Japanese emperor asked his officials if the Buddha should be worshipped in Japan They were divided on the issue with Soga no Iname 506 570 supporting the idea while Mononobe no Okoshi and Nakatomi no Kamako worried that the kami of Japan would become angry at this worship of a foreign deity The Nihon Shoki then states that the emperor allowed only the Soga clan to worship the Buddha to test it out 12 Thus the powerful Soga clan played a key role in the early spread of Buddhism in the country Their support along with that of immigrant groups like the Hata clan gave Buddhism its initial impulse in Japan along with its first temple Hōkō ji also known as Asukadera 13 The Nakatomi and Mononobe however continued to oppose the Soga blaming their worship for disease and disorder These opponents of Buddhism are even said to have thrown the image of the Buddha into the Naniwa canal Eventually outright war erupted The Soga side led by Soga no Umako and a young Prince Shōtoku emerged victorious and promoted Buddhism on the archipelago with support of the broader court Based on traditional sources Shōtoku has been seen as an ardent Buddhist who taught wrote on and promoted Buddhism widely especially during the reign of Empress Suiko 554 15 April 628 He is also believed to have sent envoys to China and is even seen as a spiritually accomplished bodhisattva who is the true founder of Japanese Buddhism Modern historians have questioned much of this seeing most of it as a constructed hagiography 14 Regardless of his actual historical role however it is beyond doubt that Shōtoku became an important figure in Japanese Buddhist lore beginning soon after his death if not earlier Taoist traditions of immortality and becoming a xian made it to Japan in the times of early Buddhism but Buddhism absorbed them U nder Buddhist influence these stories were associated with certain ascetic monks who were devoted to the Lotus Sutra 15 Asuka Buddhism 552 645 edit Asuka period 592 to 710 or 593 to 710 Buddhism Asuka bukkyō refers to Buddhist practice and thought that mainly developed after 552 in the Nara Basin region 16 Buddhism grew here through the support and efforts of two main groups immigrant kinship groups like the Hata clan who were experts in Chinese technology as well as intellectual and material culture and through aristocratic clans like the Soga 17 Immigrant groups like the Korean monks who supposedly instructed Shōtoku introduced Buddhist learning administration ritual practice and the skills to build Buddhist art and architecture They included individuals like Ekan dates unknown a Koguryŏ priest of the Madhyamaka school who according to the Nihon Shoki was appointed to the highest rank of primary monastic prelate sōjō 18 Aside from the Buddhist immigrant groups Asuka Buddhism was mainly the purview of aristocratic groups like the Soga clan and other related clans who patronized clan temples as a way to express their power and influence These temples mainly focused on the performance of rituals which were believed to provide magical effects such as protection 19 During this period Buddhist art was dominated by the style of Tori Busshi who came from a Korean immigrant family 19 nbsp Painting on silk of the semi legendary Prince Shōtoku first major sponsor of Buddhism in Japan nbsp The Great Buddha of Asuka dera oldest Buddha statue in Japan and an example of the Tori style nbsp The Yumedono Kannon another example of Tori style Hakuhō Buddhism 645 710 edit Hakuhō 673 through 686 Buddhism Hakuhō refers to Emperor Tenmu saw the official patronage of Buddhism being taken up by the Japanese imperial family who replaced the Soga clan as the main patrons of Buddhism Japanese Buddhism at this time was also influenced by Tang dynasty 618 907 Buddhism 20 It was also during this time that Buddhism began to spread from the Yamato Province to the other regions and islands of Japan 20 An important part of the centralizing reforms of this era the Taika reforms was the use of Buddhist institutions and rituals often performed at the palace or capital in the service of the state 21 The imperial government also actively built and managed the Buddhist temples as well as the monastic community 22 The Nihon Shoki states that in 624 there were 46 Buddhist temples 23 Some of these temples include Kawaradera and Yakushiji Archeological research has also revealed numerous local and regional temples outside of the capital 24 At the state temples Buddhist rituals were performed in order to create merit for the royal family and the well being of the nation Particular attention was paid to rituals centered around Buddhist sutras scriptures such as the Golden Light Sutra 25 The monastic community was overseen by the complex and hierarchical imperial Monastic Office sōgō who managed everything from the monastic code to the color of the robes 26 Nara Buddhism 710 794 edit nbsp A model of Yakushi ji a major imperial temple of Nara nbsp Model of the garan of Todai ji seen from the north side nbsp Todai ji s Great Buddha Daibutsu In 710 Empress Genme moved the state capital to Heijōkyō modern Nara thus inaugurating the Nara period This period saw the establishment of the kokubunji system which was a way to manage provincial temples through a network of national temples in each province 27 The head temple of the entire system was Tōdai ji completed in 752 28 Nara state sponsorship saw the development of the six great Nara schools called Nanto Rokushu 南都六宗 lit the Six Sects of the Southern Capital all were continuations of Chinese Buddhist schools The temples of these schools became important places for the study of Buddhist doctrine 29 The six Nara schools were Ritsu Vinaya Jōjitsu Tattvasiddhi Kusha shu Abhidharmakosha Sanronshu East Asian Madhyamaka Hossō East Asian Yogacara and Kegon Huayan 30 These schools were centered around the capital where great temples such as the Asuka dera and Tōdai ji were erected The most influential of the temples are known as the seven great temples of the southern capital Nanto Shichi Daiji The temples were not exclusive and sectarian organizations Instead temples were apt to have scholars versed in several of schools of thought It has been suggested that they can best be thought of as study groups 31 State temples continued the practice of conducting numerous rituals for the good of the nation and the imperial family Rituals centered on scriptures like the Golden Light and the Lotus Sutra 32 Another key function of the state temples was the transcription of Buddhist scriptures which was seen as generating much merit 33 Buddhist monastics were firmly controlled by the state s monastic office through an extensive monastic code of law and monastic ranks were matched to the ranks of government officials 34 It was also during this era that the Nihon Shoki was written a text which shows significant Buddhist influence The monk Dōji 744 may have been involved in its compilation 35 The elite state sponsored Nara Buddhism was not the only type of Buddhism at this time There were also groups of unofficial monastics or priests or self ordained shido sōni who were either not formally ordained and trained through the state channels or who chose to preach and practice outside of the system These unofficial monks were often subject to state punishment 35 Their practice could have also included Daoist and indigenous kami worship elements Some of these figures became immensely popular and were a source of criticism for the sophisticated academic and bureaucratic Buddhism of the capital Early Heian Period Buddhism 794 950 edit nbsp An illustration of Saichō with tea leaves He is known for having introduced tea to Japan nbsp Sanjusangen dō in Kyoto a print of a Tendai temple by Toyoharu c 1772 1781 During the Heian period the capital was shifted to Kyoto then known as Heiankyō by emperor Kanmu mainly for economic and strategic reasons As before Buddhist institutions continued to play a key role in the state with Kanmu being a strong supporter of the new Tendai school of Saichō 767 822 in particular 36 Saichō who had studied the Tiantai school in China established the influential temple complex of Enryakuji at Mount Hiei and developed a new system of monastic regulations based on the bodhisattva precepts 37 This new system allowed Tendai to free itself from direct state control 38 Also during this period the Shingon Ch Zhenyan True Word from Sanskrit Mantra school was established in the country under the leadership of Kukai This school also received state sponsorship and introduced esoteric Vajrayana also referred to as mikkyō secret teaching elements 39 The new Buddhist lineages of Shingon and Tendai also developed somewhat independently from state control partly because the old system was becoming less important to Heian aristocrats 40 This period also saw an increase in the official separation between the different schools due to a new system that specified the particular school which an imperial priest nenbundosha belonged to 41 Later Heian Period Buddhism 950 1185 edit nbsp Statue of Kuya by Kōshō son of Unkei dating to the first decade of the thirteenth century The six syllables of the nembutsu na mu a mi da butsu are represented literally by six small Amida figures streaming from Kuya s mouth During this period there was a consolidation of a series of annual court ceremonies nenju gyōji 42 Tendai Buddhism was particularly influential and the veneration of the Lotus Sutra grew in popularity even among the low class and non aristocratic population which often formed religious groups such as the Lotus holy ones hokke hijiri or jikyōja and mountain ascetics shugenja 43 Shugendō is an example of the fusion of Shinto mountain worship and Buddhism The aim of Shugendo practitioners is to save the masses by acquiring supernatural powers through rigorous training while walking through steep mountains 44 45 Furthermore during this era new Buddhist traditions began to develop While some of these have been grouped into what is referred to as new Kamakura Buddhism their beginning can actually be traced to the late Heian This includes the practice of Japanese Pure Land Buddhism which focuses on the contemplation and chanting of the nenbutsu the name of the Buddha Amida Skt Amitabha in hopes of being reborn in the Buddha field of Sukhavati This practice was initially popular in Tendai monasteries but then spread throughout Japan 46 Texts discussing miracles associated with the Buddhas and bodhisattvas became popular in this period along with texts which outlined death bed rites 47 During this period some Buddhist temples established groups of warrior monks called Sōhei This phenomenon began in Tendai temples as they vied for political influence with each other 48 The Genpei war saw various groups of warrior monks join the fray There were also semi independent clerics who were called shōnin or hijiri holy ones who lived away from the major Buddhist monasteries and preached to the people These figures had much more contact with the general populace than other monks 49 The most well known of these figures was Kuya alt Kōya 903 972 who wandered throughout the provinces engaging in good works sazen preaching on nembutsu practice and working with local Buddhist cooperatives zenchishiki to create images of bodhisattvas like Kannon 50 nbsp A scroll depicting the kami Hachiman dressed as a Buddhist monk an example of Shinbutsu shugō syncretism of kami and buddhas Another important development during this era was that Buddhist monks were now being widely encouraged by the state to pray for the salvation of Japanese kami divine beings in Shinto The merging of Shinto deities with Buddhist practice was not new at this time Already in the eighth century some major Shinto shrines jinguji included Buddhist monks which conducted rites for shinto divinities One of the earliest such figures was great Bodhisattva Hachiman Hachiman daibosatsu who was popular in Kyushu 51 Popular sites for pilgrimage and religious practice like Kumano included both kami worship and the worship of Buddhas and bodhisattvas which were often associated with each other Furthermore temples like Tōdai ji also included shrines for the worship of kami in Tōdai ji s case it was the kami Shukongōjin that was enshrined in its rear entryway 52 Buddhist monks interpreted their relationship to the kami in different ways Some monks saw them as just worldly beings who could be prayed for Other saw them as manifestations of Buddhas and bodhisattvas For example the Mt Hiei monk Eryō saw the kami as traces suijaku of the Buddha This idea called essence trace honji suijaku would have a strong influence throughout the medieval era 53 nbsp Sutra art from the Heike Nokyo chapter 12 The copying and writing of Buddhist scripture was a widespread practice in this period It was seen as producing merit good karma Artistic portraits depicting events from the scriptures were also quite popular during this era They were used to generate merit as well as to preach and teach the doctrine The Enshrined Sutra of the Taira Family Heikenōkyō is one of the greatest examples of Buddhist visual art from this period It is an elaborately illustrated Lotus Sutra installed at Itsukushima Shrine 54 The Buddhist liturgy of this era also became more elaborate and performative Rites such as the Repentance Assembly keka e at Hōjōji developed to include elaborate music dance and other forms of performance Major temples and monasteries such as the royal Hosshōji temple and Kōfukuji also became home to the performance of Sarugaku theater which is the origin of Nō Drama as well as ennen longevity enhancing arts which included dances and music Doctrinally these performative arts were seen as skillful means hōben Skt upaya of teaching Buddhism Monks specializing in such arts were called yusō artistic monks 55 Another way of communicating the Buddhist message was through the medium of poetry which included both Chinese poetry kanshi and Japanese poetry waka An example of Buddhist themed waka is Princess Senshi s 964 1035 Hosshin waka shu Collection of Waka of the Awakening Mind 1012 The courtly practice of rōei performing poetry to music was also taken up in the Tendai and Shingon lineages Both monks and laypersons met in poetry circles kadan like the Ninnaji circle which was patronized by Prince Shukaku 1150 1202 56 Kamakura Buddhism 1185 1333 new schools of Buddhism edit The Kamakura period 1185 1333 was a period of crisis in which the control of the country moved from the imperial aristocracy to the samurai In 1185 the Kamakura shogunate was established at Kamakura 57 nbsp An illustration of Hōnen preaching nbsp Ninshō This period saw the development of new Buddhist lineages or schools which have been called Kamakura Buddhism and New Buddhism All of the major founders of these new lineages were ex Tendai monks who had trained at Mt Hiei and had studied the exoteric and esoteric systems of Tendai Buddhism During the Kamakura period these new schools did not gain as much prominence as the older lineages with the possible exception of the highly influential Rinzai Zen school 58 The new schools include Pure Land lineages like Hōnen s 1133 1212 Jōdo shu and Shinran s 1173 1263 Jōdo Shinshu both of which focused on the practice of chanting the name of Amida Buddha These new Pure Land schools both believed that Japan had entered the era of the decline of the Dharma mappō and that therefore other Buddhist practices were not useful The only means to liberation was now the faithful chanting of the nembutsu 59 This view was critiqued by more traditional figures such as Myō e 1173 1232 Another response to the social instability of the period was an attempt by certain monks to return to the proper practice of Buddhist precepts as well as meditation These figures include figures like the Kōfukuji monk Jōkei 1155 1213 and the Tendai monk Shunjō 1166 1227 who sought to return to the traditional foundations of the Buddhist path ethical cultivation and meditation practice 60 Other monks attempted to minister to marginalized low class groups The Kegon Shingon monk Myō e was known for opening his temple to lepers beggars and other marginal people while precept masters such as Eison 1201 1290 and Ninshō 1217 1303 were also active in ministering and caring for ill and marginalized persons particularly those outcast groups termed non persons hinin Deal amp Ruppert 2015 p 122 Ninshō established a medical facility at Gokurakuji in 1287 which treated more than 88 000 people over a 34 year period and collected Chinese medical knowledge 61 Another set of new Kamakura schools include the two major Zen schools of Japan Rinzai and Sōtō promulgated by monks such as Eisai and Dōgen which emphasize liberation through the insight of meditation zazen Dōgen 1200 1253 began a prominent meditation teacher and abbot He introduced the Chan lineage of Caodong which would grow into the Sōtō school He criticized ideas like the final age of the Dharma mappō and the practice of apotropaic prayer 62 nbsp A 20th century depiction of the banishment of Nichiren in 1261 Additionally it was during this period that monk Nichiren 1222 1282 began teaching his exclusively Lotus Sutra based Buddhism which he saw as the only valid object of devotion in the age of mappō Nichiren believed that the conflicts and disasters of this period were caused by the wrong views of Japanese Buddhists such as the followers of Pure Land and esoteric Buddhism 63 Nichiren faced much opposition for his views and was also attacked and exiled twice by the Kamakura state Muromachi period 1336 1573 and Azuchi Momoyama period 1573 1603 edit Late Medieval Buddhism 1336 1467 edit During this period the new Kamakura schools continued to develop and began to consolidate themselves as unique and separate traditions However as Deal and Ruppert note most of them remained at the periphery of Buddhist institutional power and in some ways discourse during this era 64 They further add that it was only from the late fifteenth century onward that these lineages came to increasingly occupy the center of Japanese Buddhist belief and practice The only exception is Rinzai Zen which attained prominence earlier 13th century 65 Meanwhile the old schools and lineages continued to develop in their own ways and remained influential 65 The new schools independence from the old schools did not happen all at once In fact the new schools remained under the old schools doctrinal and political influence for some time For example Ōhashi Toshio has stressed how during this period the Jōdo sect was mainly seen as a subsidiary or temporary branch sect of Tendai Furthermore not all monks of the old sects were antagonistic to the new sects 66 During the height of the medieval era political power was decentralized and shrine temple complexes were often competing with each other for influence and power These complexes often controlled land and multiple manors and also maintained military forces of warrior monks which they used to battle with each other 67 In spite of the instability of this era the culture of Buddhist study and learning continued to thrive and grow 68 Furthermore though there were numerous independent Buddhist schools and lineages at this time many monks did not exclusively belong to one lineage and instead traveled to study and learn in various temples and seminaries This tendency of practicing in multiple schools or lineages was termed shoshu kengaku It became much more prominent in the medieval era due to the increased social mobility that many monks enjoyed 69 nbsp The main gate of Tōfuku ji the oldest sanmon in Japan Both the Kamakura shogunate 1192 1333 and the Ashikaga shogunate 1336 1573 supported and patronized the Five Mountains culture Gozan Jissetsu Seido of Rinzai Zen This Rinzai Zen tradition was centered on the ten Five Mountain temples five in Kyoto and five in Kamakura Besides teaching zazen meditation they also pursued studies in esoteric Buddhism and in certain art forms like calligraphy and poetry A pivotal early figure of Rinzai was Enni Ben en 1202 1280 a high ranking and influential monk who was initiated into Tendai and Shingon He then traveled to China to study Zen and later founded Tōfukuji 68 The Tendai and Shingon credentials of Rinzai figures such as Enni show that early Zen was not a lineage that was totally separate from the other old schools 70 Indeed Zen monastic codes feature procedures for worship of the Buddha funerals memorial rites for ancestral spirits the feeding of hungry ghosts feasts sponsored by donors and tea services that served to highlight the bureaucratic and social hierarchy 71 nbsp Tenryu ji s Sōgen Pond designed by Musō Soseki Medieval Rinzai was also invigorated by a series of Chinese masters who came to Japan during the Song dynasty such as Issan Ichinei 1247 1317 Issan influenced the Japanese interest in Chinese literature calligraphy and painting The Japanese literature of the Five Mountains Gozan Bungaku reflects this influence One of his students was Musō Soseki a Zen master calligraphist poet and garden designer who was granted the title national Zen teacher by Emperor Go Daigo 72 The Zen monk poets Sesson Yubai and Kokan Shiren also studied under Issan 73 Shiren was also a historian who wrote the Buddhist history Genkō shakusho The Royal court and elite families of the capital also studied the classic Chinese arts that were being taught in the five mountain Rinzai temples The shogunal families even built Zen temples in their residential palaces The five mountain temples also established their own printing program Gozan ban to copy and disseminate a wide variety of literature that included records of Zen masters the writings of Tang poets Confucian classics Chinese dictionaries reference works and medical texts 74 nbsp The Hansōbō shrine a Shinto shrine at the Rinzai temple of Kenchō ji It is also during this period that true lineages of Shintō kami worship begin to develop in Buddhist temples complexes lineages which would become the basis for institutionalized Shintō of later periods Buddhists continued to develop theories about the relationship between kami and the Buddhas and bodhisattvas One such idea gongen provisional manifestation promoted the worship of kami as manifest forms of the Buddhas 75 A group of Tendai monks at Mt Hiei meanwhile incorporated hongaku thought into their worship of the kami Sannō which eventually came to be seen as the source or original ground honji of all Buddhas thereby reversing the old honji suijaku theory which saw the Buddha as the honji This idea can be found in the work of the Hiei monk Sonshun 1451 1514 76 Late Muromachi Period Buddhism 1467 1603 Ōnin War edit nbsp Kinkaku ji the Temple of the Golden Pavilion is a Rinzai Zen temple built in the Muromachi period c 1397 and destroyed during the Onin War it was later rebuilt Beginning with the devastating Ōnin War 1467 1477 the late Muromachi period saw the devolution of central government control and the rise of regional samurai warlords called daimyōs and the so called warring states era Sengokuki During this era of widespread warfare many Buddhist temples and monasteries were destroyed particularly in and around Kyoto Many of these old temples would not be rebuilt until the 16th and 17th centuries 77 During this period the new Kamakura schools rose to a new level of prominence and influence They also underwent reforms in study and practice which would make them more independent and would last centuries For example it was during this period that the True Pure Land monk Rennyo 1415 1499 forged a large following for his school and rebuilt Honganji He reformed devotional practices with a focus on Shinran and honzon scrolls inscribed with the nembutsu He also made widespread use of the Japanese vernacular 78 The Zen lineages were also widely disseminated throughout the country during this era A key contributing factor to their spread as well as to the spread of Pure Land temples was their activity in funerals and mortuary rituals Some temple halls were reconstructed with a focus on mortuary rites sometimes for a specific family like the Tokugawa and were thus known as mortuary temples bodaiji 79 Furthermore during this era schools like Soto Zen the Hokke Nichiren schools and Rennyo s Pure land school also developed comprehensive curricula for doctrinal study which allowed them to become more self sufficient and independent schools and eliminated the need for their monks to study with other schools 80 There was also a decrease in the ritual schedule of the royal court Because of this Buddhist Temples which did survive this period had to turn to new ways of fundraising Aside from mortuary duties this also included increasing public viewings kaichos of hidden or esoteric images 81 nbsp A model of Ishiyama Hongan ji in Osaka one of the main fortress temple complex of the True Pure Land Jōdo Shinshu Devoted League Ikko Ikki nbsp The Battle of Ishiyama Hongan ji by Utagawa Yoshifuji This era also saw the rise of militant Buddhist leagues ikki like the Ikko Ikki Single Minded Pure Land Leagues and Hokke Ikki Nichirenist Lotus Leagues who rose in revolt against samurai lords and established self rule in certain regions These leagues would also sometimes go to war with each other and with major temples The Hokke Ikki managed to destroy the Ikko Ikki s Yamashina Honganji temple complex and take over much of Kyoto in the 1530s They eventually came into conflict with the Tendai warrior monks of Enryakuji in what became known as the Tenbun Period War in which all 21 major Hokke Nichiren temples were destroyed along with much of Kyoto 82 The Tendai warrior monks and the Ikko Ikki leagues remained a major political power in Japan until their defeat at the hands of Oda Nobunaga 1534 1582 who subjugated both the Tendai monks at Mt Hiei and then the Ikko Ikki in the Ishiyama Honganji War 1570 1580 83 During the mid sixteenth century westerners first began to arrive in Japan introducing new technologies as well as Christianity This led to numerous debates between Christians and Buddhists such as the so called Yamaguchi sectarian debates yamaguchi no shuron 82 Edo Tokugawa Period 1603 1868 edit After the Sengoku period of war Japan was re united by the Tokugawa Shogunate 1600 1868 who ran the country through a feudal system of regional daimyō The Tokugawa also banned most foreigners from entering the country The only traders to be allowed were the Dutch at the island of Dejima 84 During the seventeenth century the Tokugawa shōgun Iemitsu set into motion a series of reforms which sought to increase state control of religion as well as to eliminate Christianity Iemitsu s reforms developed what has been called the head branch system hon matsu seido and the temple affiliation system jidan alt danka seido This system made use of already existing Buddhist institutions and affiliations but attempted to bring them under official government control and required all temples to be affiliated with a government recognized lineage 85 In general the Tendai Pure Land and Shingon sects were treated more favourably than the True Pure Land and Nichiren sects because the latter had a history of inciting socio political disturbances in the 16th century 86 Buddhist leaders often worked with the government providing religious support for their rule For example the Zen monk Takuan Sōhō 1573 1645 suggested that the spirit of Tokugawa Ieyasu was a kami divine spirit He also wrote a book on zen and martial arts The Unfettered Mind addressed to the samurai Meanwhile Suzuki Shōsan would even call the Tokugawa shōgun a holy king shōō 87 In the Edo period Buddhist institutions procured funding through various ritual means such as the sale of talismans posthumous names and titles prayer petitions and medicine 88 The practice of pilgrimage was also prominent in the Edo Period Many temples and holy sites like Mt Kōya Mt Konpira and Mt Ōyama Sagami Province hosted Buddhist pilgrims and mountain ascetics throughout the era 89 nbsp Portrait of Chinese monk Yinyuan Ingen who founded the Ōbaku school During the 17th century the Ōbaku lineage of Zen would be introduced by Ingen a Chinese monk Ingen had been a member of the Linji school in Ming China This lineage which promoted the dual practice of zazen and nembutsu would be very successful having over a thousand temples by the mid 18th century 87 Meanwhile a new breed of public preachers was beginning to frequent public spaces and develop new forms of preaching These include Pure Land monk Sakuden 1554 1642 who is seen as an originator of Rakugo humor and wrote the Seisuishō Laughs to Wake You Up which is a collection of humorous anecdotes Other traveling preachers of the era who made use of stories and narratives include the Shingon Ritsu monk Rentai 1663 1726 and the Pure Land monk Asai Ryōi d 1691 90 Hakuin Ekaku 1685 1768 laid a strong emphasis on kōan training as the original pedagogical means of his tradition combining it with a somatic practice by drawing on ideas from Chinese medicine and Daoism Hakuin also criticized the mixing of Zen and Pure Land 91 His views became influential in the Meji period 1868 1912 when his dharma heirs came to dominate the Japanese Rinzai school nbsp Making Prints by Hosoki Toshikazu c 1879 nbsp Illustration of a book published in 1814 During the Edo period there was an unprecedented growth of print publishing in part due to the support of the Tokugawa regime and the creation and sale of printed Buddhist works exploded The Tendai monk Tenkai supported by Iemitsu led the printing of the Buddhist canon issaikyō i e The Tripiṭaka Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 184 186 Also notable was the publication of an exceptionally high quality reprint of the Ming era Tripiṭaka by Tetsugen Doko a renowned master of the Ōbaku school 92 An important part of the publishing boom were books of Buddhist sermons called kange bon or dangi bon 89 With the support of the Shogunate Buddhist scholasticism also thrived during the Edo period and the major Buddhist schools established new systems of scholastic study in their schools seminaries danrin 88 Examples include the 18 Jōdo school danrin in Kantō which were patronized by the Tokugawa family the most prominent being Zōjōji The True Pure Land lineages established an extensive seminary system which constituted what would eventually become Ryukoku University There was also a renaissance of Sanskrit studies in the Shingon school led by figures such as Jōgon 1639 1702 and Jiun Sonja 1718 1804 Meanwhile in Sōtō Zen scholars led by Menzan Zuihō 1683 1769 undertook a major attempt to publish and study the works of Dōgen 93 Also during this time there was a widespread movement among many Buddhist sects to return to the proper use of Buddhist precepts Numerous figures in the Ōbaku Shingon Shingon risshu Nichiren Jōdo shu and Soto schools participated in this effort to tighten and reform Buddhist ethical discipline 93 Meiji period 1868 1912 edit nbsp Buddhist temple bells being smelted for bronze during the haibutsu kishaku After the Meiji Restoration in 1868 the new imperial government adopted a strong anti Buddhist attitude A new form of pristine Shinto shorn of all Buddhist influences was promoted as the state religion an official state policy known as shinbutsu bunri separating Buddhism from Shinto which began with the Kami and Buddhas Separation Order shinbutsu hanzenrei of 1868 94 The ideologues of this new Shinto sought to return to a pure Japanese spirit before it was corrupted by external influences mainly Buddhism They were influenced by national study kokugaku figures like Motoori Norinaga 1730 1801 and Hirata Atsutane 1776 1843 both of whom strongly criticized Buddhism 95 The new order dismantled the combined temple shrine complexes that had existed for centuries Buddhists priests were no longer able to practice at Shinto shrines and Buddhist artifacts were removed from Shinto shrines 96 This sparked a popular and often violent movement to eradicate Buddhism which was seen as backwards and foreign and associated with the corrupt Shogunate There had been much pent up anger among the populace because the Tokugawa danka system forced families to affiliate themselves with a Buddhist temple which included the obligation of monetary donations Many Buddhist temples abused this system to make money causing an undue burden on their parishioners 97 98 This religious persecution of Buddhism known as haibutsu kishaku literally abolish Buddhism and destroy Shakyamuni saw the destruction and closure of many Buddhist institutions throughout Japan as well as the confiscation of their land the forced laicization of Buddhist monks and the destruction of Buddhist books and artifacts 99 In some instances monks were attacked and killed 96 The violence spread to every region of the country Japanologist Martin Collcutt believes Japanese Buddhism was on the verge of total eradication 100 It is estimated that 40 000 Buddhist temples were destroyed and in certain places the percentage of Buddhist temples destroyed reached 80 101 The intensity of the destruction depended on the region and the most violent times of haibutsu kishaku lasted between 1869 and 1871 The government edict of April 1872 ended the status of the Buddhist precepts as state law and allowed monks to marry to eat meat and stopped the regulation of tonsure and dress 102 The result of this law over the course of about four decades was that most Buddhist priests in Japan marry and many temples became hereditary holdings within a family 103 Anti Buddhist government policies and religious persecution put many Buddhist institutions on the defensive against those who saw it as the enemy of the Japanese people 104 105 This led Japanese Buddhist institutions to re examine and re invent the role of Buddhism in a modernizing Japanese state which now supported state Shintō 105 There were a broad range of reform strategies and movements which aimed at positioning Buddhism as a useful partner to a modernizing Japan This included clerical reform to tighten discipline as well as reforms concerning doctrine and practice Some Buddhists sought to modernize Buddhist thought by combining it with Western science and philosophy 103 This reformed new Buddhism shin bukkyō was often promoted by laypersons such as Sakaino Kōyō 1871 1933 and Takashima Beihō 1875 1949 who founded the Shin Bukkyōto Dōshikai New Buddhist Friends Association in 1899 and promoted social justice activities 106 The New Buddhists often joined Japanese nationalist patriotism with Buddhist virtues Some new Buddhist organizations fully embraced Japanese nationalism such as the Kokuchukai Pillar of the Nation Society of Tanaka Chigaku 1861 1939 who promoted Japanese Imperialism as a way to spread the message of the Lotus Sutra Another new Buddhist society was the Keii kai Woof and Warp Society founded in 1894 which was critical of doctrinal rigidity of traditional Buddhism and championed what they termed free investigation jiyu tōkyu as a way to respond to the rapid changes of the time 107 Kiyozawa Manshi s Seishin shugi Spiritualism movement promoted the idea that Buddhists should focus on self cultivation without relying on organized Buddhism or the state Kiyozawa and his friends lived together in a commune called Kōkōdō Vast Cavern and published a journal called Seishinkai Spiritual World 106 Other Buddhists focused on adherence to the ten precepts such as Shaku Unshō who created formed a lay organization known as the Juzen kai Association for the Ten Precepts 108 An influential figure of Buddhist reform during this period was the philosopher Inoue Enryō 1858 1919 A graduate of Tokyo Imperial University he is known for his critique of Christianity as well as for his ideas on reforming Buddhist institutions He sought to interpret Buddhist thought through a more rational lens and drew on Western philosophy as well as the teachings of the historical Buddha to do so He was a prolific author of around 120 books including Shinri kinshin The Guiding Principle of Truth and Bukkyō katsu ron Enlivening Buddhism In 1904 he inaugurated the Tetsugaku dō Hall of Philosophy which was dedicated to Shakyamuni Confucius Socrates and Kant He also advocated for social welfare activities 109 It was also during the Meiji era that Japanese Buddhist studies as an academic field began This was sparked by the overseas travel of Japanese scholars to Western universities and encountered Buddhist textual studies there particularly the study of Indian Buddhism and its languages Sanskrit and Pali This led to some Japanese Buddhists to question the orthodoxy of Japanese Buddhist traditions 110 However the Japanese government at this time was hesitant to give Buddhism any significant influence over public education and as a result Buddhist studies was classed under philosophy rather than religion and terms such as Indian studies was favoured over Buddhist studies 111 One of the first such Japanese academics was Nanjō Bunyu 1849 1927 who studied Sanskrit at Oxford with Max Muller and later took a position at Tokyo Imperial University Meanwhile Murakami Senshō 1851 1929 focused on the study of Sanskrit and Pali texts and the history of Buddhism He focused on the universal values of world Buddhism and wrote critically regarding the historical bias of Japanese Buddhism in works such as Daijō bussetsu ron hihan A Critique of the Theory that Mahayana Is the Direct Teaching of the Historical Buddha 1903 112 There were also a number of new Buddhist movements that grew popular in the Meiji period through 1945 Some of the most influential of these were the Nichirenist Lotus movements of Sōka Gakkai Reiyukai and Risshō Kōseikai They focused on active proselytization and worldly personal benefits 112 War time Buddhism 1931 1945 edit See also Buddhism and violence and Zen at War During the fifteen year war beginning with the invasion of Manchuria in 1931 and ending with the surrender of Japan in 1945 most Japanese Buddhist institutions supported militarization of Japan 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 Japanese Buddhist support for imperialism and militarism was rooted in the Meiji era need for Buddhists to show that they were good citizens that were relevant to Japan s efforts to modernize and become a major power Some Buddhists like Tanaka Chigaku saw the war as a way to spread Buddhism During the Russo Japanese War Buddhist leaders supported the war effort in different ways such as by providing chaplains to the army performing rituals to secure victory and working with the families of fallen soldiers During the fifteen year war Japanese Buddhists supported the war effort in similar ways and Buddhist priests became attached to Imperial army regiments 120 The Myōwakai Society for Light and Peace a transsectarian Buddhist organization was a strong supporter of the war effort who promoted the idea of benevolent forcefulness which held that war conducted for a good reason is in accord with the great benevolence and compassion of Buddhism 120 Another right wing Buddhist organization during the war was Nisshō Inoue s terrorist organization league of blood ketsumeidan which attempted to carry out a series of assassinations culminating in the assassination of Prime Minister Inukai Tsuyoshi an event known as the May 15 Incident During the war the Japanese government sought to further tighten its control over Buddhist institutions They attempted to force Buddhist schools to remove from their doctrines any language or idea that revealed anything less than full allegiance to the emperor or that diminished the significance of Shintō kami This included parts of the writings of medieval Buddhist founders like Shinran and Nichiren who had written that it is sometimes good to criticize rulers if they go against the Dharma 121 Buddhists were also forced to venerate talismans from the Isse Shrine and there were serious consequences for those who refused For example during the 1940s leaders of both Honmon Hokkeshu and Sōka Gakkai were imprisoned for their defiance of wartime government religious policy which mandated display of reverence for state Shinto 122 123 124 A few individuals who directly opposed war were targeted by the government These include the Rinzai priest Ichikawa Hakugen 125 and Itō Shōshin 1876 1963 a former Jōdo Shinshu priest 121 Japanese Buddhism since 1945 edit At the end of the World War II Japan was devastated by the allied bombing campaigns with most cities in ruins The occupation government abolished state Shinto establishing freedom of religion and a separation of religion and state which became an official part of the Japanese constitutional amendment in 1947 126 This meant that Buddhist temples and institutions were now free to associate with any religious lineage or to become independent if doctrinal or administrative differences proved too much One example is when Hōryuji temple became independent from the Hossō lineage and created its own Shōtoku denomination 127 The Japanese populace was aware of Buddhist involvement in aiding and promoting the war effort Because of this Buddhist lineages have engaged in acts of repentance for their wartime activities Buddhist groups have been active in the post war peace movement 127 Buddhist temples in post war Japan experienced difficult times There was much damage to be repaired and there was little funding for it In the 1950s the situation slowly improved especially for those temples that could harness tourism and other ways of procuring funding However post war land reforms and an increasingly mobile and urban population meant that temples lost both parishioners and land holdings 128 In the 1960s many temples were focused solely on providing services like funerals and burials In 1963 Tamamuro Taijō coined the term sōshiki bukkyō funerary Buddhism to describe the ritualistic formalism of temple Buddhism in postwar Japan that was often divorced from people s spiritual needs 129 Post war Japan has seen a decline in traditional temple Buddhism with roughly 100 Buddhist organizations disappearing every year 130 131 Still around 90 of Japanese funerals are conducted according to Buddhist rites 132 nbsp Soka Gakkai s Tokyo headquarters nbsp Vowz Band A group of Buddhist monks who use rock music to spread message 133 During the post war period in contrast to traditional temple Buddhism Buddhist based Japanese new religions grew rapidly especially the Nichiren Lotus Sutra based movements like Sōka Gakkai and Risshō Kōseikai which are today the largest lay Buddhist organizations in Japan 134 Soka Gakkai grew rapidly in the chaos of post war Japan 124 from about 3000 members in 1951 to over 8 million members in 2000 135 and has established schools colleges and a university as well as cultural institutions 136 A study about the reason for the growth in lay believers and increased engagement in society attributes the cause to Nichiren teachings of social responsibility In the tradition of Nichiren Buddhism however we find the Lotus Sutra linked to a view of social responsibility that is distinctive 137 According to an academic study lay believers of Buddhism offer an alternative view of Japan where their form of Buddhism would form the religious foundation of a peaceful and psychologically and materially enriched society 138 In the 1970s during a period of rapid social and economic change there was a wave of new religious movements that were called new new religions shin shin shukyō While the new religions tended to be Nichiren focused the new new Buddhist religions tend to be influenced by numerous other Buddhist traditions Buddhist new new religions include the Agon shu Agama School Gedatsukai Enlightenment Society drawing from Shingon and Shinto and Shinnyoen Garden of True Thusness a Shingon based religion 139 Aum Shinrikyō the most notorious of these new new religions is a dangerous cult responsible for the Tokyo gas attack The post war era also saw a new philosophical movements among Buddhist intellectuals called the Kyoto school since it was led by a group of Kyoto University professors mainly Nishida Kitarō 1870 1945 Tanabe Hajime 1885 1962 and Nishitani Keiji 1900 1991 These thinkers drew from Western philosophers like Kant Hegel and Nietzsche and Buddhist thought to express a new perspective Another intellectual field that has attracted interest is Critical Buddhism hihan bukkyō associated with Sōtō Zen priests like Hakamaya Noriaki b 1943 and Matsumoto Shirō b 1950 who criticized certain key ideas in Japanese Mahayana mainly Buddha nature and original enlightenment as being incompatible with the Buddha s not self doctrine Critical Buddhists have also examined the moral failings of Japanese Buddhism such as support for nationalist violence and social discrimination 140 Japanese Buddhist schools edit nbsp Portable shrine from the 1600s with 30 guardian deities and an invocation to the Lotus Sutra Buddhism and kami worship were closely associated in Japan until they were separated in the late 1800s Japanese Buddhism is very diverse with numerous independent schools and temple lineages including the old Nara schools and the new Kamakura schools that can be traced back to ancient and medieval Japan as well as more recent Japanese New Religious movements and modern lay organizations According to the religious statistics of 2023 by the Agency for Cultural Affairs of Japan the religious corporation under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Education Culture Sports Science and Technology in Japan had 129 million believers of which 46 million were Buddhists and most of them were believers of new schools of Buddhism which were established in the Kamakura period 1185 1333 The number of believers of each sect is approximately 22 million for Pure Land Buddhism 10 million for Nichiren Buddhism 5 4 million for Shingon Buddhism 5 2 million for Zen Buddhism 2 8 million for Tendai Buddhism and only about 700 000 for the old schools which were established in the Nara period 710 794 6 An old saying regarding the schools of Buddhism in relation to the different classes is The Tendai is for the royal family the Shingon for the nobility the Zen for the warrior classes and the Jodo for the masses 141 Nara Buddhism edit Main article Nanto Rokushu nbsp Kōfuku ji the national headquarters of the Hossō school nbsp Tōdai ji the head temple of the Kegon school nbsp The Golden Hall kondō at Yakushi ji The Six Nara Schools are the oldest Buddhist schools in Japan 142 These schools came to Japan from Korea and China during the late 6th and early 7th centuries They are associated with the ancient capital of Heijō kyō present day Nara where they founded the famed seven great temples of the southern capital Nanto Shichi Daiji 南都七大寺 Kegon Buddhism 華厳宗 Kegon shu introduced to Japan around 736 by the Indian monk Bodhisena The school focused on the Avatamsaka Sutra a compilation of numerous sutras as well as on the works of Huayan patriarchs on the interpenetration of all phenomenon Hossō Buddhism 法相宗 Hossō shu introduced to Japan in 654 by Japanese monk Dōshō who had travelled to China to study under Xuanzang 143 The school focused on the Yogacara philosophy of Asanga and Vasubandhu on mastering the consciousness and mind Sanron Buddhism 三論宗 Sanron shu introduced to Japan around 625 by the Goguryeo monk Hyegwan The school focused on the Madhyamaka philosopy of Nagarjuna and Aryadeva on the emptiness of all phenomenon Risshu Buddhism 律宗 Risshu shu introduced to Japan around 753 by the Chinese monk Jianzhen The school focused on the Dharmaguptaka translation of the Vinaya and on strict adherece to Pratimokṣa monastic rules Jōjitsu Buddhism 成実宗 Jōjitsu shu introduced to Japan around 625 by the Goguryeo monk Ekwan 144 The school focused on the Satyasiddhi Sastra a text of Abhidharma by the philosopher Harivarman It was never a truly independent school instead it was studied along with Sanron doctrine Kusha Buddhism 倶舎宗 Kusha shu a Sarvastivada school focused on the Abhidharmakosabhaṣya a text of Abhidharma by the philosopher Vasubandhu It was never a truly independent school instead it was studied along with Hossō doctrine Heian Buddhism edit See also Mikkyo Eventually the increasing power of Six Nara Schools and their influence in politics started to overwhelm the city of Nara This forced Emperor Kanmu to relocate the capital moving it to Heian kyō present day Kyoto It also directly encouraged the creation of the Tendai school founded by Saichō and the Shingon school founded by Kukai Tendai Buddhism 天台宗 Tendai shu is a branch of the Tiantai Buddhism introduced to Japan by Saichō in 805 who also introduced tantric elements into the tradition The primary text of Tendai Buddhism is the Lotus Sutra but the Mahavairocana Tantra 大日経 Dainichikyō is also important The Lotus Sutra is also central to Tendai esoteric teachings Shingon Buddhism 真言宗 Shingon shu is a branch of the Vajrayana Buddhism introduced to Japan by Kukai in 816 who traveled to China and studied the Chinese Mantrayana tradition Shingon is based mainly on two tantric scriptures the Mahavairocana Tantra and the Vajrasekhara Sutra 金剛頂経 Kongōchōkyō Dainichi Nyorai is central to Shingon esoteric teachings Additionally this period saw the development of Shugendō an eclectic tradition which brought together Buddhist and ancient Shinto elements It was founded by En no Gyōja 役行者 En the ascetic Kamakura Buddhism edit nbsp Chion in the head temple of Jōdo shu nbsp A traditional map of Eihei ji the main temple of the Sōtō school nbsp A print of the Nichiren Shu temple Ikegami Honmon ji by Hiroshige nbsp Bodhidharma Chinese 達磨 Hiragana だるま Rōmaji Daruma painted by Miyamoto Musashi swordsman artist and philosopher close to Takuan Soho monk of the Rinzai school linked to the samurai caste founded by the 28th Patriarch During the Kamakura period many Buddhist schools classified by scholars as New Buddhism or Shin Bukkyo as opposed to Old Buddhism Kyu Bukkyō Pure Land Buddhism which focuses on Nembutsu practice chanting the name of Amida Buddha so as to be reborn in the Pure Land The Jōdo shu founded by Hōnen 1133 1212 The Jōdo Shinshu founded by Shinran 1173 1263 The Ji shu founded by Ippen 1239 1289 The Yuzu Nembutsu shu founded by Ryōnin 1072 1132 Zen Buddhism originating from Chinese Chan Buddhism focuses on Zazen meditation The Rinzai Zen founded by Eisai 1141 1215 a Japanese line of the Chinese Linji school emphasizes Kōan practice The Sōtō Zen founded by Dōgen 1200 1253 a Japanese line of the Chinese Caodong school emphasizes Shikantaza practice The Ōbaku Zen introduced by Ingen in 1654 incorporates elements of Nembutsu practice Nichiren Buddhism founded by Nichiren 1222 1282 which focuses on the Lotus Sutra and Odaimoku practice chanting the name of the Lotus Sutra The Nichiren shu venerates and reveres the Shakyamuni Buddha of the Essential Teachings The Nichiren Shōshu venerates and reveres the Dai Gohonzon of the High Sanctuary of the Essential Teachings Japanese New Religious Movements edit There are various Japanese New Religious movements which can be considered Buddhist sects the largest of these are lay Nichiren Buddhist groups such as Soka Gakkai Reiyukai Risshō Kōsei kai and lay Zen Buddhist groups such as Sanbo Kyodan and FAS Society But there are other new movements such as Agon Shu 阿含宗 Agama School a Buddhist school which focuses on studying the Agamas a collection of early Buddhist scriptures Cultural influence editSocietal influence edit During the Kamakura 1185 1333 and Muromachi 1336 1573 Buddhism or the Buddhist institutions had a great influence on Japanese society Buddhist institutions were used by the shogunate to control the country During the Edo 1600 1868 this power was constricted to be followed by persecutions at the beginning of the Meiji era 1868 1912 84 Buddhist temples played a major administrative role during the Edo period through the Danka or terauke system In this Japanese citizens were required to register at their local Buddhist temples and obtain a certification terauke which became necessary to function in society At first this system was put into place to suppress Christianity but over time it took on the larger role of census and population control Artistic influence edit nbsp Iconographical evolution of the Wind God Left Greek wind god from Hadda Afghanistan 2nd century Middle wind god from Kizil Caves Tarim Basin 7th century Right Japanese wind god Fujin 17th century In Japan Buddhist art started to develop as the country converted to Buddhism in 548 Some tiles from the Asuka period shown above the first period following the conversion of the country to Buddhism display a strikingly classical style with ample Hellenistic dress and realistically rendered body shape characteristic of Greco Buddhist art Buddhist art became extremely varied in its expression Many elements of Greco Buddhist art remain to this day however such as the Hercules inspiration behind the Nio guardian deities in front of Japanese Buddhist temples or representations of the Buddha reminiscent of Greek art such as the Buddha in Kamakura a Deities edit nbsp Iconographical evolution from the Greek god Heracles to the Japanese god Shukongōshin From left to right 1 Heracles Louvre Museum 2 Heracles on coin of Greco Bactrian king Demetrius I 3 Vajrapani the protector of the Buddha depicted as Heracles in the Greco Buddhist art of Gandhara 4 Shukongōshin manifestation of Vajrapani as protector deity of Buddhist temples in Japan Various other Greco Buddhist artistic influences can be found in the Japanese Buddhist pantheon the most striking being that of the Japanese wind god Fujin In consistency with Greek iconography for the wind god Boreas the Japanese wind god holds above his head with his two hands a draping or wind bag in the same general attitude b The abundance of hair has been kept in the Japanese rendering as well as exaggerated facial features Another Buddhist deity Shukongōshin one of the wrath filled protector deities of Buddhist temples in Japan is also an interesting case of transmission of the image of the famous Greek god Heracles to East Asia along the Silk Road Heracles was used in Greco Buddhist art to represent Vajrapani the protector of the Buddha and his representation was then used in China and Japan to depict the protector gods of Buddhist temples c Artistic motifs edit nbsp Vine and grape scrolls from Nara 7th century The artistic inspiration from Greek floral scrolls is found quite literally in the decoration of Japanese roof tiles one of the only remaining element of wooden architecture throughout centuries The clearest ones are from the 7th century Nara temple building tiles some of them exactly depicting vines and grapes These motifs have evolved towards more symbolic representations but essentially remain to this day in many Japanese traditional buildings d Architecture and Temples edit Main articles List of National Treasures of Japan temples and Japanese Buddhist architecture Soga no Umako built Hōkō ji the first temple in Japan between 588 and 596 It was later renamed as Asuka dera for Asuka the name of the capital where it was located Unlike early Shinto shrines early Buddhist temples were highly ornamental and strictly symmetrical The early Heian period 9th 10th century saw an evolution of style based on the mikkyō sects Tendai and Shingon Buddhism The Daibutsuyō style and the Zenshuyō style emerged in the late 12th or early 13th century Buddhist holidays editThe following Japanese Buddhist holidays are celebrated by most if not all major Buddhist traditions 145 Jan 1st Japanese New Year Shōgatsu Feb 15th Nirvana Day Nehan e The day at the Buddha was said to have passed away into Parinirvana his final vanishing Mar 20th Higan e the Spring Equinox celebration Apr 8th Buddha s Birthday Hanamatsuri i e Kanbutsu e 潅仏会 or Busshō e 仏生会 July Aug Obon Festival a festival to honor the spirits of one s ancestors Sept 21st approximately Higan e the Autumnal Equinox celebration Dec 8th Bodhi Day Shaka Jōdō e or just Jōdō e this celebrated the awakening of the Buddha Dec 31st Jōya e or Sechibun E the end of the year celebration Some holidays are specific to certain schools or traditions For example Zen Buddhist traditions celebrate Daruma ki on October 15 to commemorate the life of Bodhidharma Demographics editAccording to the Japanese Government s Agency for Cultural Affairs estimate as of 2018 update with about 84 million or about 67 of the Japanese population Buddhism was the religion in Japan with the most adherents followed by Shinto though a large number of people practice elements of both 1 According to statistics by the Agency for Cultural Affairs in 2023 the religious corporation under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Education Culture Sports Science and Technology in Japan had 129 million believers of which 46 million were Buddhists Most of them were believers of new schools of Buddhism which were established in the Kamakura period 1185 1333 6 According to these statistics the largest sects of Japanese Buddhism are the Jōdo Buddhists with 22 million believers followed by the Nichiren Buddhists with 10 million believers 6 There are a wide range of estimates the Pew Research Center estimated 36 2 of the population in 2010 practiced Buddhism 146 The Japanese General Social Survey placed the figure at less than 20 of the population in 2017 The 2013 Japanese National Character Survey showed that roughly 70 of the population do not adhere to any religious beliefs 2 Another survey indicates that about 60 of Japanese families have a butsudan Buddhist shrine in their homes 147 In a 2012 Pew Research study Japan has the third largest Buddhist population in the world after China and Thailand 148 See also editJapanese Buddhist architecture Buddhist deities Buddhist modernism Buddhist philosophy History of Buddhism Ichibata Yakushi Kyodan Japanese Buddhist pantheon Kaichō Kanjin Nara National Museum Religion in Japan Shinbutsu shugō Shinbutsu kakuri Shinbutsu bunri Haibutsu kishakuNotes edit Katsumi Tanabe Needless to say the influence of Greek art on Japanese Buddhist art via the Buddhist art of Gandhara and India was already partly known in for example the comparison of the wavy drapery of the Buddha images in what was originally a typical Greek style Katsumi Tanabe Alexander the Great East West cultural contacts from Greece to Japan p 19 gt Katusmi Tanabe The Japanese wind god images do not belong to a separate tradition apart from that of their Western counter parts but share the same origins One of the characteristics of these Far Eastern wind god images is the wind bag held by this god with both hands the origin of which can be traced back to the shawl or mantle worn by Boreas Oado Katsumi Tanabe Alexander the Great East West cultural contacts from Greece to Japan p 21 Katsumi Tanabe The origin of the image of Vajrapani should be explained This deity is the protector and guide of the Buddha Sakyamuni His image was modelled after that of Hercules The Gandharan Vajrapani was transformed in Central Asia and China and afterwards transmitted to Japan where it exerted stylistic influences on the wrestler like statues of the Guardian Deities Nio Katsumi Tanabe Alexander the Great East West cultural contacts from Greece to Japan p 23 The transmission of the floral scroll pattern from West to East is presented in the regular exhibition of Ancient Japanese Art at the Tokyo National Museum References edit a b 宗教年鑑 令和5年版 Religious Yearbook 2023 PDF in Japanese Agency for Cultural Affairs Government of Japan 2023 12 28 p 35 Retrieved 2024 03 17 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link a b Iwai Noriko 11 October 2017 Measuring religion in Japan ISM NHK and JGSS PDF Report JGSS Research Center Archived PDF from the original on 11 November 2020 Retrieved 1 July 2020 a b Bowring Richard John 2005 The religious traditions of Japan 500 1600 Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press pp 15 17 ISBN 0 521 85119 X a b Dykstra Yoshiko Kurata De Bary William Theodore 2001 Sources of Japanese tradition New York Columbia University Press p 100 ISBN 0 231 12138 5 Bowring Richard John 2005 The religious traditions of Japan 500 1600 Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press pp 16 17 ISBN 0 521 85119 X a b c d e 文化庁 宗教年鑑 令和5年版 p 51 PDF Agency for Cultural Affairs 2023 12 28 Retrieved 2024 03 17 Hoffman Michael Buddhism s arrival Shinto s endurance Archived 2012 07 17 at archive today The Japan Times March 14 2010 p 7 Holcombe Charles 1999 Trade Buddhism Maritime Trade Immigration and the Buddhist Landfall in Early Japan Journal of the American Oriental Society 119 2 280 292 doi 10 2307 606111 ISSN 0003 0279 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 p 18 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 21 23 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 19 22 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 p 14 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 19 26 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 27 29 Tyler Royall ed 1987 Japanese Tales Pantheon Fairy Tale and Folklore Library Translated by Tyler Royall 1st ed New York Pantheon Books pp xxx ISBN 978 0 394 52190 9 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 29 31 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 30 32 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 31 32 a b Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 32 34 a b Deal amp Ruppert 2015 p 45 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 p 46 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 48 49 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 49 50 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 p 50 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 p 51 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 p 53 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 54 56 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 p 59 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 55 56 Powers John 2000 Japanese Buddhism A Concise Encyclopedia of Buddhism Vol 1 Oxford Oneworld Publications pp 103 107 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 p 56 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 p 58 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 59 60 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 p 60 a b Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 60 61 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 68 69 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 p 72 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 p 73 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 68 71 85 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 p 70 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 68 70 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 p 87 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 90 92 Exoteric Buddhism Esoteric Buddhism and Shugendo 顕教 密教 修験道 www tendai jimon jp Tendaijimon Sect Archived from the original on 21 December 2020 Retrieved 4 April 2024 Masayasu Oda The Formation and its Meaning of the 75 sacred place View in the Omine Sacred Mountain Area Archived from the original on 2 May 2019 Retrieved 4 April 2024 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 87 91 93 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 92 96 Snelling 1987 p 178 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 91 93 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 92 94 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 95 97 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 98 100 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 87 95 97 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 99 102 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 100 104 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 101 103 Snelling 1987 p 181 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 113 115 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 117 118 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 p 121 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 122 123 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 123 124 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 124 126 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 p 135 a b Deal amp Rupert 2015 pp 135 136 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 139 141 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 136 137 a b Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 142 144 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 151 153 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 143 145 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 143 146 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 145 146 Louis Frederic Kathe Roth Japan encyclopedia Harvard University Press 2005 ISBN 0 674 01753 6 ISBN 978 0 674 01753 5 Str 402 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 145 147 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 149 151 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 149 152 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 p 172 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 176 179 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 177 180 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 179 182 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 172 173 a b Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 179 181 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 181 183 a b Snelling 1987 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 184 186 Makoto Hayashi Amstutz Galen 2012 General Education and the Modernization of Japanese Buddhism The Eastern Buddhist 43 1 2 137 ISSN 0012 8708 JSTOR 44362468 Archived from the original on 2021 09 13 Retrieved 2021 09 13 a b Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 188 190 a b Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 199 201 a b Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 193 195 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 190 192 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 189 191 Japan Buddhist Federation Buddhanet A Brief History of Buddhism in Japan accessed 30 4 2012 Archived 2020 11 05 at the Wayback Machine a b Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 200 202 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 211 213 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 210 211 a b Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 212 214 Paul B Watt Review of Nam Lin Hur Death and Social Order in Tokugawa Japan Buddhism Anti Christianity and the Danka System Internet Archive Nam Lin Hur Death and social order in Tokugawa Japan Buddhism anti Christianity and the danka system Harvard University Asia Center 2007 pp 1 30 The Rise of Funerary Buddhism in Tokugawa Japan Internet archive Stone Jacqueline 1993 Reviewed work Of Heretics and Martyrs in Meiji Japan Buddhism and Its Persecution James Edward Ketelaar Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 53 2 582 598 doi 10 2307 2719461 JSTOR 2719461 John Breen July 2000 Mark Teeuwen ed Shinto in History Ways of the Kami Honolulu University of Hawaii Press p 230 ISBN 978 0 8248 2363 4 OCLC 43487317 Jorn Borup 25 February 2008 Japanese Rinzai Zen Buddhism Myōshinji a living religion p 21 ISBN 9789047433095 Archived from the original on 14 January 2023 Retrieved 19 January 2021 Jaffe Richard 1998 Meiji Religious Policy Soto Zen and the Clerical Marriage Problem Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 24 1 2 46 Archived from the original on November 19 2014 a b Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 213 215 Yoshiharu Tomatsu The Secularization of Japanese Buddhism The Priest as Profane Practitioner of the Sacred Presented at the American Academy of Religion Philadelphia November 16 1995 a b Deal amp Ruppert 2015 p 209 a b Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 214 216 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 214 218 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 215 217 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 216 218 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 219 221 Makoto Hayashi Amstutz Galen 2012 General Education and the Modernization of Japanese Buddhism The Eastern Buddhist 43 1 2 141 ISSN 0012 8708 JSTOR 44362468 Archived from the original on 2021 09 13 Retrieved 2021 09 13 a b Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 220 222 Victoria 2006 Gier Nicholas F Buddhism and Japanese Nationalism A sad chronicle of complicity Archived 2016 10 10 at the Wayback Machine Victoria Brian Daizen 2010 The Negative Side of D T Suzuki s Relationship to War PDF The Eastern Buddhist 41 2 97 138 archived PDF from the original on 2012 01 20 retrieved 2013 08 22 Stone Jaquelin 2000 Japanese Lotus Millennialism In Wessinger Catherine Millennialism Persecution and Violence Syracuse University Press p 265 Otani Eiichi Missionary Activities of Nichiren Buddhism in East Asia in Modern Japanese Buddhism and Pan Asianism The 19th World Congress of the International Association for the History of Religions Tokyo March 28 2005 pp 21 22 PDF Kawase Takaya The Jodo Shinshu Sects Missionary Work in Colonial Korea in Modern Japanese Buddhism and Pan Asianism The 19th World Congress of the International Association for the History of Religions Tokyo March 28 2005 pp 6 7 PDF Klautau Orion 2017 The Question of Quintessence Buddhism in Wartime Japanese Academia Belief and Practice in Imperial Japan and Colonial Korea Palgrave Macmillan 137 152 Archived from the original on 2019 10 28 Retrieved 2019 10 28 a b Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 222 225 a b Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 224 226 Stone Jaqueline I 2003 In Buswell Robert E ed Encyclopedia of Buddhism New York Macmillan Reference Lib ISBN 0028657187 p 598 Metraux Daniel A 1986 The Sōka Gakkai s search for the realization of the world of Risshō ankokuron Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 13 1 40 doi 10 18874 jjrs 13 1 1986 31 61 Archived from the original on 2016 03 21 a b Religion and American Cultures An Encyclopedia vol 1 p 61 ISBN 157607238X Ives Christopher 2009 Imperial Way Zen University of Hawaii Press Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 231 232 a b Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 232 234 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 232 233 Nika Efanova 2013 Funeral Buddhism A Religion in Crisis B A Thesis University of Iceland School of Humanities Japanese Language and Culture In Japan Buddhism long the religion of funerals may itself be dying out by Norimitsu Onishi International Herald Tribune 14 July 2008 Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications 2013 Japan Statistical Yearbook 2014 in Japanese Tōkyō Nihon Tōkei Kyōkai Archived from the original on 2013 12 05 Retrieved 2013 12 03 Japanese funeral traditionscustoms com Archived from the original on 2017 06 27 Retrieved 2009 11 07 BBC News Japanese monks use rock music to spread message Tim Allman reports 2013 07 03 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 233 235 A Sect s Political Rise Creates Uneasiness in Japan kenyon edu Archived from the original on 2014 11 13 Retrieved 2013 10 13 Discover your potential 自分力の発見 soka ac jp Soka University Archived from the original on 2013 10 05 Retrieved 2013 10 13 Stone Jacqueline I 2002 When Disobedience is Filial and Resistance is Loyal The Lotus Sutra and Social Obligations in the Medieval Nichiren Tradition PDF p 262 Archived PDF from the original on 2015 01 04 Retrieved 2020 10 20 Via Articles on the Lotus Sutra Tendai and Nichiren Buddhism Jacqueline I Stone Princeton University Archived from the original on 2015 01 04 Retrieved 2015 01 04 The Soka Gakkai and Human Security D Metraux p 49 Virginia Review of Asian Studies Mary Baldwin College Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 235 237 Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 237 239 Hase Mikiso April 17 2018 Premodern Japan A Historical Survey Routledge Deal amp Ruppert 2015 pp 56 57 Heinrich Dumoulin James W Heisig Paul F Knitter Zen Buddhism a History Japan p 5 World Wisdom Inc 2005 ISBN missing Takakusu 2002 p 76 List of Japanese Buddhist Holidays japanlifeandreligion com Archived from the original on 2010 11 04 Retrieved 19 January 2021 Global Religious Landscape Buddhists Pew Research Center December 18 2012 Archived from the original on January 28 2018 Retrieved July 1 2020 Japanese Saints Mormons in the Land of the Rising Sun John Patrick Hoffmann Lexington Books 2007 p 37 The Global Religious Landscape Pew Research Center December 2012 Archived from the original on 26 December 2018 Retrieved 5 November 2018 Bibliography edit Buswell Robert Lopez Donald S 2013 The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 15786 3 Archived from the original on 2023 01 14 Retrieved 2015 10 18 Deal William E Ruppert Brian 2015 A Cultural History of Japanese Buddhism John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1405167017 Archived from the original on 2023 01 14 Retrieved 2021 02 22 Rahder Johannes January 1956 Harivarman s Satyasiddhi sastra Philosophy East amp West 5 4 348 doi 10 2307 1396885 JSTOR 1396885 Sharf Robert H August 1993 The Zen of Japanese Nationalism History of Religions 33 1 1 43 doi 10 1086 463354 S2CID 161535877 archived from the original on 2020 12 29 retrieved 2012 04 28 Shi Zhangqing 2004 The Two Truths in Chinese Buddhism Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 2035 7 Snelling John 1987 The Buddhist handbook A Complete Guide to Buddhist Teaching and Practice London Century Paperbacks Takakusu Junjirō 2002 The Essentials of Buddhist Philosophy Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 1592 6 Tamura Yoshiro 2005 Japanese Buddhism A Cultural History Kosei Publishing ISBN 4 333 01684 3 Victoria Brian Daizen 2006 Zen at war Second ed Lanham e a Rowman amp Littlefield PublishersFurther reading edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Buddhism in Japan Asakawa K and Henry Cabot Lodge Ed Japan From the Japanese Government History Micah L Auerback A storied sage canon and creation in the making of a Japanese Buddha Chicago The University of Chicago Press 2016 Eliot Sir Charles Japanese Buddhism London Kegan Paul International 2005 ISBN 0 7103 0967 8 Reprint of the 1935 original edition Bunyiu Nanjio 1886 A short history of the twelve Japanese Buddhist sects Tokyo Bukkyo sho ei yaku shupan sha Covell Stephen 2001 Living Temple Buddhism in Contemporary Japan The Tendai Sect Today Comparative Religion Publications Paper 1 Dissertation Western Michigan University Covell Stephen G 2006 Japanese Temple Buddhism Worldliness in a Religion of Renunciation Univ of Hawaii ISBN 0824829670 Melissa Anne Marie Curley Pure land real world modern Buddhism Japanese leftists and the utopian imagination Honolulu University of Hawaiʻi Press 2017 Horii Mitsutoshi 2006 Deprofessionalisation of Buddhist Priests in Contemporary Japan A Socio Industrial Study of a Religious Profession Electronic Journal of Contemporary Japanese Studies 6 1 unpaginated Kawanami Hiroko Japanese Nationalism and the Universal Dharma in Ian Harris ed Buddhism and Politics in Twentieth Century Asia London New York Continuum 1999 pp 105 126 ISBN 978 0 8264 5178 1 Gereon Kopf ed The Dao companion to Japanese Buddhist philosophy Dordrecht Springer 2019 Matsunaga Daigan Matsunaga Alicia 1996 Foundation of Japanese buddhism Vol 1 The Aristocratic Age Los Angeles Tokyo Buddhist Books International ISBN 0 914910 26 4 Matsunaga Daigan Matsunaga Alicia 1996 Foundation of Japanese buddhism Vol 2 The Mass Movement Kamakura and Muromachi Periods Los Angeles Tokyo Buddhist Books International 1996 ISBN 0 914910 28 0 Matsunami Kodo 2004 A Guide to Japanese Buddhism PDF Tokyo Japan Buddhist Federation archived from the original PDF on February 2 2013 Mark Rowe Bonds of the dead temples burial and the transformation of contemporary Japanese Buddhism Chicago The University of Chicago Press 2011 James Mark Shields Critical Buddhism engaging with modern Japanese Buddhist thought Farnham Ashgate 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Buddhism in Japan amp oldid 1221040916, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.