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Zushi·Hayama Station

Internal link templates linking to redirectsKeikyū Zushi LineRailway stations in Japan opened in 1985Railway stations in Kanagawa PrefectureStations of Keikyu
Zushi Hayama Station June 6 2021 various
Zushi Hayama Station June 6 2021 various

Zushi·Hayama Station (逗子・葉山駅, Zushi-Hayama-eki) is a railway station on the Keikyu Zushi Line in Zushi, Kanagawa, Japan, operated by the private railway operator Keikyu. This station comes last in an alphabetical list of Japanese railway stations (Abashiri Station in Hokkaido is first).

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Zushi·Hayama Station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Zushi·Hayama Station
Prefectural Road 24, Zushi

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Zushi·Hayama StationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 35.295855555556 ° E 139.58116111111 °
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Address

東秀

Prefectural Road 24
249-0006 Zushi
Japan
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Zushi Hayama Station June 6 2021 various
Zushi Hayama Station June 6 2021 various
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Nearby Places

Kōmyō-ji (Kamakura)
Kōmyō-ji (Kamakura)

Tenshōzan Renge-in Kōmyō-ji (天照山蓮華院光明寺) is a Buddhist temple of the Jōdo sect in Zaimokuza, near Kamakura, Japan, the only major one in the city to be close to the sea. Kōmyō-ji is number one among the Kantō Jūhachi Danrin (関東十八檀林), a group of 18 Jōdo temples established during the Edo period by Tokugawa Ieyasu, and dedicated to both the training of priests and scholarly research. It is also the sect's head temple for the Kantō region. In spite of the fact it is a Jōdo sect temple, Kōmyō-ji has several of the typical features of a Zen temple, for example a sanmon (main gate), a pond and a karesansui (rock garden). Kōmyō-ji has always enjoyed the patronage of Japan's powerful and is the only Buddhist temple in Kamakura to have had the privilege of being a daimyō's funeral temple. It was chosen for that role by the Naitō clan, feudal lords from today's Miyazaki Prefecture whose tombs are part of the temple's compound.The temple, besides the usual Buddhist cemetery, maintains a special crypt for the ashes of house pets and other animals, and twice a year holds in the Main Hall ceremonies in their memory. The crypt was created and is maintained by a group of veterinarian volunteers.The temple holds occasional music concerts in its main hall, concerts that are announced in its Wweb site. For 3500 yen, visitors who make a reservation can try at Kōmyō-ji the vegetarian food the resident priests themselves eat. Entrance is free, with the exception of the sanmon, which can be visited only telephoning the temple, explaining the motives for the planned visit, making a reservation and paying a small fee.