ShÅsÅin

The ShÅsÅ-in (æ£å€‰é™¢) is the treasure house that belongs to TÅdai-ji, Nara.[1][2] The building is in the azekura log-cabin style, with a raised floor. It lies to the northwest of the Daibutsuden (which houses the Great Buddha). The ShÅsÅ-in houses artifacts connected to Emperor ShÅmu (701–756) and Empress KÅmyÅ (701–760), as well as arts and crafts of the TempyÅ period of Japanese history.
History
The origin of TÅdai-ji ShÅsÅ-in dates back to 756, when Empress KÅmyÅ dedicated over 600 items to the Great Buddha at TÅdai-ji to express her love for her lost husband, Emperor ShÅmu. Her donation was made over five times across several years, then stored at ShÅsÅ-in. Later in Heian period, a large number of treasures, consisting of items and instruments used in important Buddhist services were transferred from a different warehouse in TÅdai-ji. Given the importance of the items stored in this warehouse, the administration of ShÅsÅin has been taken over by the government, currently the Imperial Household Agency.
After the Meiji Restoration, it came under the administration of the national government, and since World War II has been under the administration of the Imperial Household Agency. It is on the UNESCO register of World Heritage Sites as one of the Historic Monuments of Ancient Nara. It is also a national treasure of Japan.
Building
The building is in the azekura (æ ¡å€‰) log-cabin style, with a raised floor takayuka-shiki (高床å¼). ShÅsÅ-in is the only building to survive the Siege of Nara in the Heian period.[3] Front width is about 33.1 m, depth is about 9.3 m, 1st floor height is about 2.5 m. The exact construction dates are unclear, but works probably started soon after the empress bequest in AD 756 and definitely were finished before AD 759, when the bequest items storage lists were complete.
Treasures
ShÅsÅin today holds around 9,000 items, leaving out items that are yet to be classified.[4] While many of the collection are of remainders from the 8th century and are of domestic production, either art or documents, there are also variety of items originating from Tang China. Other material comes from as far as India, Iran, Greece, Rome and Egypt.
Although these collections are not open to the public, selections are shown at Nara National Museum once a year in autumn.
Silk collection
Since 1994, the Imperial Household Agency's Office of the Shosoin Treasure House, which is responsible for the administration of the repository, has been producing exact reproduction of ancient Nara textiles. Apart from the appearance and colour, care has been given to reproduce the production and weaving style. The silk is donated each year by Empress Michiko, who personally runs the Momijiyama Imperial Cocoonery at Tokyo Imperial Palace.[5]
See also
- The Kamakura Museum of National Treasures designed to resemble the ShÅsÅ-in, also holds a fine collection of Japanese art and sculpture.
- For an explanation of terms concerning Japanese Buddhism, Japanese Buddhist art, and Japanese Buddhist temple architecture, see the Glossary of Japanese Buddhism.
- Kura (storehouse)
References
- ↑ "æ£å€‰é™¢ãƒ›ãƒ¼ãƒ ページ (ShÅsÅin Homepage, Imperial Household Agency (Japan))" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2007-03-12.
- ↑ "ShÅsÅin" originally stood for the warehouse area that many of the Buddhist temples and governmental sites in the ages of Nara period and Heian period were known to have, and "ShÅsÅ" (æ£å€‰) was meaning each independent building located in the such area. However, all but the one in TÅdai-ji were lost over time, thus ShÅsÅin became a proper noun for the only remaining treasure house building at TÅdai-ji.
- ↑ Turnbull, Stephen (1977). The Samurai, A Military History. MacMillan Publishing Co., Inc. p. 50. ISBN 0026205408.
- ↑ Piggott, Joan. (1990). "Mokkan. Wooden Documents from the Nara Period", Monumenta Nipponica, 45:4, pp. 449-470.
- ↑ Kyoto National Museum | Her Majesty the Empress and the Sericulture of the Koishimaru Silkworm
External links
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to ShÅsÅin. |
- Imperial Household Agency page for ShÅsÅin (in Japanese)
- Shosoin Tanabetsu Mokuroku (List of Shosoin Solid Objects)
- Article in English with photos
- Guide to Shosoin resarch (Nara period written documents of the scriptorium)
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Coordinates: 34°41′31″N 135°50′19″E / 34.69194°N 135.83861°E