2024/05/05

Welcome to Paradise !

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Welcome to Gokuraku 極楽 the Buddhist Paradise !

I will try and introduce information about the life of Shakyamuni Buddha
and a glossary of terms, many of them are kigo for Japanese haiku.

Paradise, Heaven 極楽 gokuraku and Hell 地獄  jigoku

ano yo あの世 the other world
haraiso はらいそ paradise (paraiso)
higan 彼岸 the other shore
joodo 浄土 Jodo Paradise of Amida
ka no yo かの世 the other world
. meido 冥土 冥途 the other world / yomi 黄泉 "the yellow springs" .
paradaisu パラダイス paradise, Paradies
raise 来世 afterlife, the world to come
rakuen 楽園 paradise, earthly paradise
shigo no sekai 死後の世界 the world after death
takai 他界 to die, to pass into the other world
tengoku 天国 heaven
tenjoo 天上 Tenjo, "up there", heaven

. toogen 桃源 Shangri-La シャングリラ, Arcadia, Eden - Toogenkyoo 桃源郷 fairyland, .
桃源郷 lit. Peach Blossom Valley

. raigoo, raigō 来迎 Raigo, the soul on the way to paradise .
"Decent of Amida Buddha", "Amida Coming over the Mountain"
- raigoozuu 来迎図 Raigozu, illustrations of the way to paradise


. Tokoyo no Kuni 常世国, 常世の国 The Eternal Land (of Shintoism) .
yomi 黄泉 the yellow springs, die Gelben Quellen
yuutopia ユートピア Utopia


And in the limbo toward the other world here are a lot of vengeful spirits, monsters and goblins.

. jigoku 地獄 Buddhist hell - Introduction .
naraku ならく / 奈落 hell, hades

. Pilgrimages in Japan - Introduction .


. - - - Glossary of Terms - - - . - not yet in the ABC index.

. Introducing Buddha Statues .

. Introducing Buddhist Temples 寺 .

. Famous Buddhist Priests - ABC-List .


Gabi Greve
GokuRakuAn 極楽庵, Japan


. Gokuraku Joodoo 極楽浄土 Gokuraku Jodo, Paradise in the West of Amida Nyorai .



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- - - - - ABC - Table of Contents - - - - -

- AAA - / - BBB - / - CCC - / - DDD - / - EEE -

- FFF - / - GGG - / - HHH - / - I I I - / - JJJ -

- KK KK - / - LLL - / - MMM - / - NNN - / - OOO -

- PPP - / - QQQ - / - RRR - / - SSS - / - TTT -

- UUU - / - VVV - / - WWW - / - XXX - / - YYY - / - ZZZ -


. Reference, LINKS - General Information .


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. Join the Jizo Bosatsu Gallery - Facebook .




. Join the Kannon Bosatsu Gallery on facebook .





. Join the Onipedia Demons on facebook .


under construction - please come back!
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- #gokuraku #jigoku #heavenandhell #priest -
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2024/05/04

General Information

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General Information and Reference


- - - - - - - - - - Latest Additions - - -

. Darumapedia - Temples and Gokuraku .

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A Tourist Guidebook to Paradise  
GokuRaku no Kankoo Annai 極楽の観光案内 by 西村公朝 Nishimura Kocho

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- - - - - - - - - - External LINKS - - -


Buddhism in Japan - Buddha Statues - an extensive guide

A-TO-Z PHOTO DICTIONARY
source : Mark Schumacher


Buddhist Art News - Japan
News on Buddhist art, architecture, archaeology, music, dance, and academia.
- source : buddhistartnews.wordpress.com



地獄と極楽がわかる本 - to understand hell and heaven
source : futabasha.co.jp

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A Cultural History of Japanese Buddhism
William E. Deal, Brian Ruppert




- quote -
Review by Jonathan Ciliberto
Intended for “upper-level undergraduate and graduate students as well as scholars,” A Cultural History of Japanese Buddhism fills a gap by presenting largely recent work of Japanese and Western scholars on Japanese Buddhism. The authors consider prior books on Buddhist cultural history as largely from Indian and Tibetan viewpoints. The particular presumptions, intellectual models, or even prejudices of such positions (e.g., to view Japanese Buddhism as a distant reflection, or a corruption, of a continental original) are seen as obstacles to an accurate history of Buddhism’s influence and interaction with Japan.

The great value of the book is to direct readers to approaches and theories perhaps overlooked by more general histories of Buddhism. Each chapter includes its own bibliography and notes, making the book useful for study of narrow sections of Japan’s history.

Published in 2015, many summaries of and citations to recent scholarship are incorporated. Although a relatively short volume (~200 pages, absent notes and biolographies), it includes a great deal of purely historical information surrounded by “cultural history,” covering Japan from protohistory to the present. The book includes a character glossary.

Some themes that run through the book are: that Buddhism in Japan was not a monolithic “ism,” and that individual sects were not exclusive of one another but rather interacted in practice and doctrine; the complex interaction of indigenous religion with Buddhism; Buddhist lineages in Japan as the agents of cultural influence (e.g., “lineages had already begun to pursue the possibility of an ultimate deity”).

Many chapters include subsections on women and gender in Japanese Buddhism, including a fascinating section on the link between literary salons “established in women’s circles” and often held within monasteries and creating an environment for “the evolving and intimate connection between monastic Buddhists and their lay supporters” (102-4). More generally, these sections illustrate the important influence of women on Japanese Buddhism throughout its history. The book also devotes substantial attention to religion in Japan in the modern period, a much-needed resource.

One instance of a simplification of Japanese history that the authors seek to correct is the view that Shinto and Buddhism remained largely separate strands. While the doctrine of honji-suijaku is relatively well-known, the book reveals in greater depth the complex interplay between the two religions by reference to the writings of recent (and less-recent) scholars.

Another attempt to reveal subtlety beyond a stock scholarly view concerns (in the Heian period) the “limitations of the ‘rhetoric of decadence’ [that] some scholars attribute to ‘old’ Buddhism”. The authors offer Minamoto no Tamenori’s (d. 1101) Sanbo’e as an attempt “to incorporate other parts of the populace” beyond the aristocracy. This undercuts the claim that “practitioners of the ‘old’ Buddhism were completely unconcerned with those outside their walls” as a cause of the emergence of “religious heroes” (like Kukai and Nichiren) (88-90). (That said, the ongoing theme of Japanese Buddhists, unsatisfied with the quality of teaching in Japan, who sought original texts and more authoritative teachers in China, does support the basis of a kind of “decadent” Buddhism.)

It is important to have a sense of what “cultural history” is, or what it intends to do, before considering the authors’ approach to a history Japanese Buddhism. Given that cultural history includes an extremely wide set of approaches, determining the present authors’ use of it as a method is largely about picking out strands from the mass of possibilities. (One author refers to “the notorious difficulty of organizing the disorderly profusion of intradisciplinary, cross-disciplinary, and varying national-intellectual meanings and understandings of the “culture concept” into anything resembling consensual form” [Geoffrey Eley, “What Is Cultural History?”, New German Critique, No. 65, Cultural History/Cultural Studies, Spring – Summer, 1995, pp. 19-36].)

While the authors don’t set out their approach, generally in the present volume they tend to consider Buddhism in Japan less in terms of its religious or spiritual character or content and more as a generator of social and political forms. Or, rather, it is unspoken that religion was the driving force in developing myriad cultural effects in Japan, but the book doesn’t linger on religion itself, as it does on these effects.

It is unclear whether this approach is based on the position described by the scholar of medieval Japanese Buddhism Bernard Faure when he refers to an “absolute standpoint” as a “contradiction in terms” (Faure, Visions of Power (2000), 9). (Faure is frequently cited in A Cultural History of Japanese Buddhism.) That is: there are no “religious” standpoints motivating individuals, in terms of absolute or ideal concepts, or at least that taking direction from such standpoints is delusional.

Faure’s view (following from Le Goff) is that “literary and artistic works of art (and, in the case of religion, ritual practice) do no represent any eternal, unitary reality, but rather are the products of the imagination of those who produce them” (Faure, 10, emphasis added). A similar view of religion advocates a “History of Religions approach – trying to figure out how and why certain forms of religiosity took shape the way they did instead of assuming that it was religious experience that made religion” (Alan Cole, Fathering Your Father (2009), xi).

Thus, Faure and historians who follow his approach write religious history absent of religion as an internal activity, aimed at self-improvement, transcendental, or altruistic. Or perhaps this approach simply considers individual “religious” experiences too personal, too psychologically opaque, to form the basis of historical inquiry, and thus discards consideration of such experiences as “religious” in nature, and instead consider them in mainly terms of materiality and politics.

The authors of A Cultural History of Japanese Buddhism follow more directly the historian Kuroda Toshio’s sociopolitical functionalist approach. While occasionally offering descriptions of Buddhist practice and doctrine, the book largely focuses on: state-control over and connection with Buddhism in Japan (“Buddhism was firmly controlled by the state” during the early period (66)); art as narrative or purely visual, rather than a function of practice (99); Buddhist practice as a means of gaining influence or power at court, and the claim that “undoubtably” the introduction of esoteric lineages was related to the royal court’s interest in such power(106); that the court drove ritual (“Pivotal organizational and philosophical changes begin to arise in the royal court with the consolidation of the annual court ceremonies” (88, 106)).

Throughout, the authors take pains to connect influential Buddhists with the court: “The Daigoji halls, like those in other major monasteries, primarily housed scions of Fujiwara and Minamoto heritage” (107); “The Shingon lineages, from a very early point, […] had a special connection with the royal line” (108); “the intimate association between Tendai’s Enryakuji (Hiei) and the leading Fujiwaras” (108). Every monk who was a member of a royal family is identified in such a manner.

The author’s de-emphasis on “religious” explanations for religious history in Japan is intended to counterbalance writers who rely too much on such explanations. Citing the notable effect of D.T. Suzuki’s presentation of Zen Buddhism to the West (absurdist, gnomic, iconoclastic), and pointing out that “few Japanese Zen adherents, except those in the modern period and particularly those with access to the writings of Suzuki translated into Japanese” would recognize it, the author’s more social-science approach finds some justification. (146-7).

Performance theory is connected with the authors’ approach. A Cultural History of Japanese Buddhism doesn’t lay any groundwork for the reader as to what the doctrine or technique of applying performance theory are. It is a notoriously amorphous field of inquiry. One description of the approach states that “the performative nature of societies around the world, how events and rituals as well as daily life [are] all governed by a code of performance,” and one sees how this aligns with Deal and Ruppert’s approach in the present volume: religious acts are not generated by authenticity, but rather are ritualized and “for show.” Performance theory is difficult to understand as contributing much to an analysis of history, since all human action is outward, and thus all actions are, in a literal sense, “performed.” The negative application of the theory is applied in the present volume: performance theory supports the strategy of avoiding examination the motivations, hearts, or minds of individual in Japanese Buddhist history.

This is a strategy for writing history, and indicates the above-mentioned scholarly caution, perhaps, but also it tends to paint individuals as acting according to a plan (or with hindsight), rather than by caprice, calling, sincerity, compassion, or irrationality. Perhaps it doesn’t matter, in terms of cultural history, whether or not an effect was caused by religion or some other motivation, but only that the effect did occur.

With regard to Buddhist art, the authors acknowledge – particularly as to poetry – that the “undoubted” motivation for including Buddhist themes was a recognition of the contrast between non-attachment and the “intoxication of those who made use of or found beauty in the linguistic arts” (102). Oddly – although in keeping with the author’s “non-religious” approach to religious art – the idea that such an aesthetic intoxication is meant exactly to advance individuals’ practice (e.g., through visualization) is never mentioned, with respect to poetry or any other art form.
- source : Buddhist Art News -

- reference -

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CLICK for more books !


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BUDDHISM & SHINTŌISM IN JAPAN
A-TO-Z PHOTO DICTIONARY OF JAPANESE RELIGIOUS SCULPTURE & ART

- source : Mark Schumacher



Digital Dictionary of Buddhism - 電子佛教辭典 / Edited by A. Charles Muller
sign in as guest
- source : www.buddhism-dict.ne

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2023/10/10

Tokuzoin Ichihara Nishino

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. Japan - Shrines and Temples - Index .
. Buddhist Temples and their Legends .
. Ichihara 市原郡八十八ヶ所霊場 88 Temples Pilgrimage .
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Tokuzooin 徳蔵院 Tokuzo-In, Nishino
日暮山 Higurezan 徳蔵院 Tokuzoin
市原市西野223-1 / Ichihara city, Nishino

The main statue is 子育観音 Kosodate Kannon Bosatsu to protect children.

Other statues are of
薬師如来 Yakushi Nyorai, 阿弥陀如来 Amida Nyorai, 地蔵菩薩 Jizo Bosatsu, 釈迦如来 Shaka Nyorai and 聖天 Shoten.

In the Muromachi area around 1500, 深慶和上 Priest Shinkei had this temple built as a retirement place
and it was called 下総国分寺 Temple Shimosa Kokubun-Ji.
The temple has typical flowers and blossoms for each season.
Not much more information is found online.

徳蔵院 大師堂 The Hall for Kobo Daishi


In the compound is a statue of 寿老人 the Lucky Deity Juro-Jin.
. Seven Gods of Good Luck 七福神 Shichifukujin .

In the compound are two Shinto Shrines:
- 藤塚稲荷社 Fujizuka Inari Shrine
and
- 金毘羅宮 Konpira-Gu Shrine

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shuin 朱印 stamp

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- Yearly Festivals 年中行事 -

除夜の鐘
元朝護摩供
七福神参り
節分
震災法要 in March and November
花まつり
御影供
施餓鬼会
観月会(お月見の会)
先師忌
寺社巡り
. source : tesshow ... .

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Also on the following pilgrimages :

松戸七福神の 寿老人 Matsudo Shichifukujin - Jurojin
. source : tesshow.jp/chiba/seven_mazdo ... .

下総四郡八十八所霊場 Shimofusa Four Areas 88 Pilgrimage - Nr. 47
. source : tesshow.jp/chiba/shimofsa ...

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- - - - - Reference of the Temple

- source : google
- reference source : tesshow -
- reference source : nippon-reijo.jimdofree ... -



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This Temple is Number 19 of the
. Ichihara 市原郡八十八ヶ所霊場 88 Temples Pilgrimage .

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. Temples with legends .

. Japanese Legends - 伝説 民話 昔話 – ABC-List .

. Japan - Shrines and Temples - Index .

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2023/10/08

Kozenji Inage Takada

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. Japan - Shrines and Temples - Index .
. Buddhist Temples and their Legends .
. Inage 7 Yakushi Temples 稲毛七薬師霊場 .
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Koozenji 興禅寺 Kozen-Ji, Takada
円瀧山 / 圓瀧山 Enryuzan - 光明院 Komyo-In 興禅寺 Kōzenji, Kozen-Ji
神奈川県横浜市港北区高田町1799 / Kanagawa, Yokohama city, Kohoku ward, Takada town

The main statue is 十一面観世音菩薩 Juichimen Kannon Bosatsu with 11 Heads.

The temple was founded in 853 by 慈覚大師円仁 Priest Jikaku Daishi Ennin.
He also placed a statue of 勝軍地蔵 Shogun Jizo Bosatsu, which he had carved himself.
. Ennin - Jigaku Daishi 慈覚大師 / 慈覺大師 (794 – 864) .

In 1650 the Temple received more land and became very important.

- The Main Gate -
At the entrance at 山門(仁王門) the mountain gate are two large statues of the Nio deities.


In the compound is a 多宝塔 Tahoto Pagoda and
薬王殿 a hall for Yakuo, the Deity of Medicine,
where 薬師如来 Yakushi Nyorai is venerated.

In the compound are 十二干支守り本尊 12 statues of the yearly Zodiac animals.
. 12 Zociac animals 干支 eto, kanshi .

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shuin 朱印 stamp

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Also on the following pilgrimages :

武相不動尊 7番、
関東百八地蔵霊場 86番、
准秩父三十四観音霊場 27番、
横浜七福神寿老神、Jurojin
都築橘樹酉年地蔵尊霊場 10番
. - reference : tesshow.jp ... - .

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- - - - - Reference of the temple
. source - xxion504kanda ... .
- source : inage yakushi .



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This temple is Nr. 06 of the pilgrimage
. Inage 7 Yakushi Temples 稲毛七薬師霊場 .

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. Japanese Legends - 伝説 民話 昔話 – ABC-List .

....................................................................... Nagano 長野県 
木曽郡 Kiso district 木曽町 Kiso town

e 絵 an image
at 興禅寺 Temple Kozen-Ji
At the wooden door made of a cedar tree there was an image
of an old woman pulling a mortar, and an old man standing near her.
Sometimes at night the two began to talk and there were strange noises in the room.
There were also images of musical instruments, which seemd to make sound at night.
It was all very strange and scary, so the doors were finally painted all black.

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kitsune a fox,蛻庵稲荷 Setsuan Inari
A fox shape-shifted into a samurai and called himseld 蛻庵 Setsuan.
He said he was a messenger from Suwa Shrine.
He was soon found out.
He was now taken in at 興禅寺 Temple Kozen-Ji and fed.
When he was on an errand to 安国寺 the Temple Ankoku-Ji he was shot.
Soon there was an epidemy in the area and people said it was the curse of the fox.
People then venerated the fox an the tmeple Kozen-Ji as 蛻庵稲荷 Setsuan Inari.

蛻庵稲荷 セツアンイナリ Setsuan Inari Shrine

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- reference : Nichibun Yokai Database -

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. Temples with legends .

. Japanese Legends - 伝説 民話 昔話 – ABC-List .

. Japan - Shrines and Temples - Index .

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2023/10/06

Muryojufukuji Mie Shimokanbe

[ . BACK to DARUMA MUSEUM TOP . ]
. Japan - Shrines and Temples - Index .
. Buddhist Temples and their Legends .
. Mie Shikoku Henro Pilgrimage 三重四国八十八ヵ所霊場 .
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Muryoojufukuji 無量寿福寺 Muryojufuku-Ji, Shimokanbe
天童山 Tendozan, 震旦院 Shintan-In, 無量寿福寺 Muryojufukuji
伊賀市下神戸5 / Iga city, Shimokobe

The main statue is 阿弥陀如来 Amida Nyorai.

- Chant of the temple
なうまく さまんだ ぼだなん さんさく そわか

The temple was founded by 右馬允入道仏光坊 Uma Nyudo Butsuko-Bo.
During the first 第一次天正伊賀の乱 Tensho Iga Rebellion the Iga Ninja attacked the mountain castle.
During the second 第二次天正伊賀の乱 Rebellion they burned the castle.
In the large compound of the Temple are 本堂 the main hall,
the 山門 Mountain Gate, the 鐘楼 Bell tower and more buildings.
Behind the Temple is a mountain, below are the rivers 岐川比自 Hijiki and 長田川 Nagata (木津川 Kizugawa).
In the North-East are the remains of 財良寺 the Temple Zaira-Ji.
The priest 行然和尚 Gyozen Osho was born in 1222 in the 三田庄 Mita Hamlet
and became a temple acolyte at the age of 17.
He studied Buddhism in Nara and Kyoto and later named this Temple 天童山 Tendo-Zan.
In 1391, records show that the temple was also related to the Temple 西大寺 Saidai-Ji in Nara
and to the Temple 唐招提寺 Toshodai-Ji.

- quote
Shinobi no Sato
Walking through the Ninja Village, one is enveloped in a strange landscape.
The landscape, surrounded by similar small hills, goes on and on,
luring you into a labyrinth-like interior.
The villages are scattered around the foot of the hills,
and the houses are blocked by small valleys, making it difficult to see the houses.
From the air, the complex valley landscape looks as if it is finely divided into many branches.
This unique topography was created by the erosion of the clay layer
called "Ko-Biwa-ko Formation" 3 million years ago.
At the tip of a hill with a good view or at the entrance of a valley,
there are always the ruins of castles, which are not stone walls
but rather piled up earth and surrounded on all sides by earthen mounds about 50 meters high.
There are as many as 800 of them in Iga and Koga,
making it one of Japan's most densely populated areas of castle buildings.
The reason for this appearance can be traced to the organization of the ninja.
. source : shinobinosato.com/en/heritage ... .

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shuin 朱印 stamp

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- Yearly Festivals 年中行事 -

1月1日    修正会
1月第3日曜  大般若会
3月21日   春彼岸法要
8月7日    施餓鬼法要
9月23日   秋彼岸法要

. The Root of Ninja .

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Also on the following pilgrimages :

. Iga Shikoku 88 Pilgrimage 伊賀四国八十八ヶ所 . - Nr. 32

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- - - - - Reference of the temple
- source : igaueno.net/ninjaroad ... .
- reference source : mieshikoku88.net/list ... -
- reference source : nippon-reijo.jimdofree ... -



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This temple is Nr. 39 of the pilgrimage

. Mie Shikoku Henro 三重四国八十八ヵ所霊場 .

. Kobo Daishi Kukai 弘法大師 空海 (774 - 835) .

. Amida Nyorai 阿弥陀如来 .

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. Temples with legends .

. Japanese Legends - 伝説 民話 昔話 – ABC-List .

. Japan - Shrines and Temples - Index .

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2023/10/04

Fudoji Fudo Oki

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. Japan - Shrines and Temples - Index .
. Buddhist Temples and their Legends .
. Mie Shikoku Henro Pilgrimage 三重四国八十八ヵ所霊場 .
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Fudoji 不動寺 Fudo-Ji, Oki
引谷山 (いんこくざん) Inkokuzan, 利生院 Risho-In, 不動寺 Fudoji
伊賀市沖 1911/ Mie, Iga city, Oki

The main statue is a secret statue of 不動明王 Fudo Myo-O.
. Fudo Myo-O 不動明王 .


- Chant of the temple
なうまく さんまんだ ばざらだん せんだん 
まかろしゃだ そわたや うんたらた かんまん


The temple was founded by 智証大師 Priest Chisho Daishi Enchin.
. Enchin 圓珍 - 円珍 (814 - 891) .
Enchin visited the area in 870 and built a large temple to serve the local community.
The temple was placed in the direction of the kimon 鬼門 demon gate in the North-East.
. kimon 鬼門 demon gate .

In 1236, it was revitalized as the Shingon Buddhism came to the area,
and then lasted for the next 300 years.
Around 1580 it was burned down during a local war.
In 1587, the priest 祐泉律師 Yusen had it rebuilt and 藩主藤堂家 the regent of Todo family kept it.
In 1866, it burned down during a fire.
In 1931, a new main hall was built.
In 2018, the head priest in the 18th genertion, 普久山俊隆 Fukuyama Shunryu, died in September at the age of 73.
The new head priest was 堀本さん Mister Horimoto.

The main statue of Fudo Myo-O is a hibutsu secret statue, coming from
the Temple 久留山威勝寺 Kuruzan Isho-Ji.
It was carved by 弘法大師 Kobo Daishi.

- - - In the compound
is 愛宕堂 an Atago Hall and a 薬師堂 Yakushi Do Hall.
A special stone statue of 地蔵菩薩石 Jizo Bosatsu was made in 1534.

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shuin 朱印 stamp

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- Yearly Festivals 年中行事 -

2月11日    大般若会
8月9日     施餓鬼法要
旧10月14日  仏名会(十夜)

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- - - - - Reference of the temple
- source : iga-younet.co.jp 
- reference source : mieshikoku88.net/list ... -
- reference source : nippon-reijo.jimdofree ... -



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This temple is Nr. 38 of the pilgrimage

. Mie Shikoku Henro 三重四国八十八ヵ所霊場 .
and
. Iga Shikoku 88 Pilgrimage 伊賀四国八十八ヶ所 . - Nr. 34

. Kobo Daishi Kukai 弘法大師 空海 (774 - 835) .

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. Japanese Legends - 伝説 民話 昔話 – ABC-List .


....................................................................... Okayama 岡山県 
真庭郡 Maniwa district 落合町 Ochiai town

. Misaki ミサキ / 御先 / 御前 / 御崎 Legends about the Misaki deity .
At 落合町栗原不動寺 the hamlet of Kurihara in Ochiai is the temple Fudo-Ji
where Misaki Koojin ミサキ荒神 the Wild Misaki Kojin Deity is venerated.
In the compound is also a statue of a megami 女神 Female Deity.
In the hill on the South-East side near the graveyard is a mound, where the Misaki Deity is venerated.
. Misaki legends from Okayama .




....................................................................... Shiga 滋賀県 
甲賀市 Koga city 信楽町 Shigaraki town

. Tengu Legends 天狗と伝説 .
One of the parishioners of the Temple 不動寺 Fudo-Ji did not show up.
The villagers used bells and drums to search for him.
They found him hanging dead on a kuzu no ki 楠木 camphor tree
at the roadside of Ishiyakushi Ise Michi 石薬師伊勢道 the road to Ise.
A Tengu had bewitched him.
There is a rest station called Ishi-Yakushi Juku 石薬師宿 along the 東海道 Tokaido.
. Ishiyakushiji 石薬師寺 Temple Ishiyakushi-Ji .

Ishiyakushi-juku 石薬師宿 (Suzuka) is postal station Nr. 44 along the Tokaido Highway.
. Tokaido 東海道 Tokaido highway .

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- reference : Nichibun Yokai Database -

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. Temples with legends .

. Japanese Legends - 伝説 民話 昔話 – ABC-List .

. Japan - Shrines and Temples - Index .

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2023/10/02

Renzoin Ichihara Hikida

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. Buddhist Temples and their Legends .
. Ichihara 市原郡八十八ヶ所霊場 88 Temples Pilgrimage .
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Renzooin 蓮蔵院 Renzo-In, Hikida
福王山 Fukuozan 慈恩寺 Gion-Ji 蓮蔵院 Renzoin
市原市引田94 / Ichihara town, Hikida

The main statue is 聖観音菩薩 Sho Kannon Bosatsu
. Kannon Bosatsu Introduction .

This small statue of about 1 meter is secret and only shown once every 33 years.
It is made from one piese of a 針葉樹 cornifer.
It was made by 行基菩薩 Gyoki Bosatsu.
Gyoki came to the area on a long boat trip and when he landed in 上総国市原郡五井村洲崎, he fell asleep.
In his dream he saw a huge serpent swimming in the river, which was in fact the trunk of a large tree.
Gyoki took the trunk and used natabori 鉈彫り hatched carving to make the statue.
. Gyoki Bosatsu 行基菩薩 .

The temple was founded in the Heian Period by 慈恩 Priest Jion.
Not much information is found online.

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Also on the following pilgrimage:

. Rokusakigumi Juzenko 六崎組十善講八十八ヶ所霊場 .
Nr. 30 - 佐倉市大蛇町387-1 -- Sakura city, Orochi town

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- - - - - Reference of the Temple

- source : douraku-yuyu.net ...
- reference source : tesshow -
- reference source : nippon-reijo.jimdofree ... -



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This Temple is Nr. 18 of the
. Ichihara 市原郡八十八ヶ所霊場 88 Temples Pilgrimage .

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. Temples with legends .

. Japanese Legends - 伝説 民話 昔話 – ABC-List .

. Japan - Shrines and Temples - Index .

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2023/09/30

Fukurakuji Ichihara Otsubo

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. Buddhist Temples and their Legends .
. Ichihara 市原郡八十八ヶ所霊場 88 Temples Pilgrimage .
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Fukurakuji 福楽寺 Fukuraku-Ji, Otsubo
福王山 Fukuozan 福楽寺 Fukurakuji
市原市大坪340 / Chiba, Ichihara city, Otsubo

The date of the founding is not clear.
Not much information is found online.


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- - - - - Reference of the Temple

- source : tesshow
- reference source : nippon-reijo.jimdofree ... -



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This Temple is Nr. 17 of the
. Ichihara 市原郡八十八ヶ所霊場 88 Temples Pilgrimage .

. 福楽寺 Fukuraku-Ji, Mie, Inoshioya .

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. Temples with legends .

. Japanese Legends - 伝説 民話 昔話 – ABC-List .

. Japan - Shrines and Temples - Index .

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2023/09/28

Komyoji Yakushi Shishigaya

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. Buddhist Temples and their Legends .
. Inage 7 Yakushi Temples 稲毛七薬師霊場 .
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Koomyooji 光明寺 Komyo-Ji, Shishigaya
長栄山 / 長榮山 Choeizan 遍照院 Hensho-In 光明寺 Komyoji
横浜市鶴見区獅子ケ谷2丁目29-13 / Kanagawa, Yokohama, Tsurumi ward, Shishigaya

The main statue is 薬師如来 Yakushi Nyorai.

The temple was founded in 1362 by 慶嚴法印 High Priest Keisuke.
It was located in the center of the village.
It was related to the Temple Jindai-Ji in 多磨郡 Tama in 1729..

In the compound is a group of six Jizo Bosatsu statues.


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shuin 朱印 stamp

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- - - - - Reference of the temple
. source - google .
- source : inage yakushi .



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This temple is Nr. 05 of the pilgrimage
. Inage 7 Yakushi Temples 稲毛七薬師霊場 .

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. Japanese Legends - 伝説 民話 昔話 – ABC-List .

. Komyo-Ji Temples in Japan - Legends .

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. Temples with legends .

. Japan - Shrines and Temples - Index .

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2023/09/26

Kanbodaiji Kannon Shimagahara

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. Mie Shikoku Henro Pilgrimage 三重四国八十八ヵ所霊場 .
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Kanbodaiji 観菩提寺 Kanbodai-Ji, Shimagahara
普門山 Bumonzan, 観菩提寺 Kanbodaiji
伊賀市島ケ原町1349 / Mie, Iga city, Shimagahara

The Kannon statue is a standing 十一面観世音菩薩 Juichimen Kannon with 11 Faces
dating to the early Heian Period (around 900).
It is 227 cm tall and kept in a small shrine as a secret statue.
It is shown once every 33 years.

- Chant of the temple
おん まか きゃろにきゃ そわか

The temple was founded in 751 by 多紀内親王 Imperial Princess Taki (? - 751).
The princess died the same year.
In 752, the priest 実忠和尚 Jitchu renovated the temple and built 観音堂 a Kannon Hall.
The hall was later known as 正月堂 Shogatsu-Do Hall.
Around it were rich rice fields.
The temple had many buildings, but all were lost in fires.
In 楼門 the Tower Gate there are two standing statues of
広目天 Komoku-Ten and 多門天 Tamon-Ten.
These two statues are important culturel assets of the temple.

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shuin 朱印 stamp

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- Yearly Festivals 年中行事 -

1月1日-3日   初詣
2月11日-12日 修正会
8月17日     夏会式(十七夜)
12月31日    除夜の鐘

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Also on the following pilgrimage :

. Iga Shikoku 88 Pilgrimage 伊賀四国八十八カ所 . - Nr. 66

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- - - - - Reference of the temple
- source : google
- reference source : mieshikoku88.net/list ... -
- reference source : nippon-reijo.jimdofree ... -



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This temple is Nr. 37 of the pilgrimage

. Mie Shikoku Henro 三重四国八十八ヵ所霊場 .

. Kobo Daishi Kukai 弘法大師 空海 (774 - 835) .

. Juichimen Kannon 十一面観音 Senju Kannon 千手観音 Kannon with 11 faces and 1000 arms .

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. Temples with legends .

. Japanese Legends - 伝説 民話 昔話 – ABC-List .

. Japan - Shrines and Temples - Index .

[ . BACK to DARUMA MUSEUM . TOP . ]
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- - ###kanbodaiji #shogatsudo ##mieshikokuhenro ##shikokuhenromie -
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2023/09/24

Manzoin Ichihara Gongendo

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. Japan - Shrines and Temples - Index .
. Buddhist Temples and their Legends .
. Ichihara 市原郡八十八ヶ所霊場 88 Temples Pilgrimage .
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Manzooin 満蔵院 Manzo-In, Gongendo
満蔵院 Manzoin
市原市権限堂24 / Ichihara city, Gongedo (Gongendō)

Not much information is found online.

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- - - - - Reference of the Temple
- source : google
- reference source : tesshow -
- reference source : nippon-reijo.jimdofree ... -



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This Temple is Nr. 16 of the
. Ichihara 市原郡八十八ヶ所霊場 88 Temples Pilgrimage .

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. Japanese Legends - 伝説 民話 昔話 – ABC-List .

....................................................................... Aichi 愛知県 


. kudagitsune 管狐, クダ狐, クダギツネ と伝説 Legends about the "pipe fox" .
This happened in May of 1919.
The priest of 満蔵院 the Temple Manzo-In kept a pipe fox.
One of them followed the priest who was going to look after an ill person.
The fox possessed the patient.
An ascetic priest held a special ritual to get rid of the pipe fox.

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- reference : Nichibun Yokai Database -

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. Ichihara 市原郡八十八ヶ所霊場 88 Temples Pilgrimage .

. Temples with legends .

. Japanese Legends - 伝説 民話 昔話 – ABC-List .

. Japan - Shrines and Temples - Index .

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[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO . TOP . ]
- - ###Ichiharahenro ##Ichihara ##gongendo -
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