Mikawa Thirty-three Kannon
Hōfuku-ji
The Mikawa Thirty-three Kannon (三河三十三観音 Mikawa Sanjūsan Kannon) are a collection of Buddhist temples in eastern Aichi Prefecture, Japan, most of which are near Mikawa Bay. The name is derived from Mikawa Province, the former name for the area.
Thirty-three Kannon
| No. | Name | Japanese | Sangō | Sect | Location |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hōfuku-ji | 宝福寺 | I-yama | Sōtō | Okazaki |
| 2 | Zuinen-ji | 随念寺 | Jōdo shū | Okazaki | |
| 3 | Daiju-ji | 大樹寺 | Jōdō-san | Jōdo-shū | Okazaki |
| 4 | Kannon-ji | 観音寺 | Sōtō | Okazaki | |
| 5 | Shōō-ji | 松応寺 | Jōdo-shū | Okazaki | |
| 6 | Jōsei-in | 浄誓院 | Jōdo-shū | Okazaki | |
| 7 | Ryūkai-in | 龍海院 | Sōtō | Okazaki | |
| 8 | Anshin-in | 安心院 | Sōtō | Okazaki | |
| 9 | Kannon-ji | 観音寺 | Jōdo-shū | Okazaki | |
| 10 | Tokushō-ji | 徳性寺 | Jōdo-shū | Okazaki | |
| 11 | Ishin-ji | 渭信寺 | Sōtō | Okazaki | |
| 12 | Hōzō-ji | 法蔵寺 | Nison-zan | Jōdo-shū | Okazaki |
| 13 | Tenkei-in | 天桂院 | Sōtō | Gamagōri | |
| 14 | Kaiō-ji | 善応寺 | Jōdo-shū | Gamagōri | |
| 15 | Eikō-ji | 永向寺 | Jōdo-shū | Gamagōri | |
| 16 | Risei-in | 利生院 | Jōdo-shū | Gamagōri | |
| 17 | Shinnyo-ji | 真如寺 | Jōdo-shū | Gamagōri | |
| 18 | Fuda-ji | 補蛇寺 | Jōdo-shū | Gamagōri | |
| 19 | Taizan-ji | 太山寺 | Shingon | Hazu | |
| 20 | Myōzen-ji | 妙善寺 | Jōdo-shū | Hazu | |
| 21 | Tokurin-ji | 徳林寺 | Jōdo-shū | Hazu | |
| 22 | Unkō-ji | 運光院 | Jōdo-shū | Kira | |
| 23 | Shōbō-ji | 正法寺 | Sōtō | Kira | |
| 24 | Hōshu-in | 宝珠院 | Sōtō | Kira | |
| 25 | Seifuku-ji | 西福寺 | Jōdo-shū | Kira | |
| 26 | Kaizō-ji | 海蔵寺 | none | Kira | |
| 27 | Konren-ji | 金蓮寺 | Sōtō | Kira | |
| 28 | Kezō-ji | 華蔵寺 | Rinzai | Kira | |
| 29 | Jissōankokuzen-ji | 実相安国禅寺 | Rinzai | Nishio | |
| 30 | Seigan-ji | 盛巌寺 | Sōtō | Nishio | |
| 31 | Kōzen-ji | 康全寺 | Sōtō | Nishio | |
| 32 | Hōgonni-ji | 法厳尼寺 | Sōtō | Nishio | |
| 33 | Chōen-ji | 長円寺 | Sōtō | Nishio |
Tōkai Hundred Kannon
The Mikawa Thirty-three Kannon combine with the Mino Thirty-three Kannon in Gifu Prefecture, the Owari Thirty-three Kannon in western Aichi Prefecture and Toyokawa Inari to form the Tōkai Hundred Kannon.
See also
- Tōkai Hundred Kannon
- Glossary of Japanese Buddhism (for an explanation of terms concerning Japanese Buddhism)
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, March 21, 2013. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.