Byakugō-ji

Byakugō-ji
白毫寺
Information
Location
Address 392 Byakugōji-chō, Nara, Nara Prefecture
Country Japan

Byakugō-ji (白毫寺) is a Buddhist temple in Nara, Japan. A number of wooden statues of the Heian and Kamakura periods have been designated Important Cultural Properties and the temple's five-coloured camellias are a Prefectural Natural Monument.[1][2]

Name

The byakugō or urna is the curl of white hair between the eyebrows that is one of the thirty-two physical characteristics of the Buddha.[3][4]

Buildings

The five by five bay Hondō, with tiled hipped roof, dates from the early Edo period (first half of the seventeenth century) and has been designated a Municipal Cultural Property.[5] A tahōtō was still standing in the Meiji period.[6]

Treasures

Byakugō-ji's seven Important Cultural Properties of Japan are, from the Heian period, an Amida Nyorai, and a bodhisattva traditionally identified as Monju Bosatsu and once enshrined in the temple's tahōtō, and from the Kamakura period, Enma-ō, attendants Shiroku (司録) and Shimyō (司命), Taizan-ō (太山王), Jizō Bosatsu, and Kōshō Bosatsu (興正菩薩) (Eison (叡尊).[1] The Taizan-ō was carved by Kōen (康円) in 1259 and has an inscription documenting repairs in 1498.[7][8]

See also

References

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Coordinates: 34°40′15″N 135°51′05″E / 34.670957°N 135.851269°E / 34.670957; 135.851269

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