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Otagi Nenbutsu-ji

8th-century establishments in JapanBuddhist temple stubsBuddhist temples in KyotoImportant Cultural Properties of JapanJapanese religious building and structure stubs
Temples of AvalokiteśvaraTendai temples
Otagi nenbutsuji09s3200
Otagi nenbutsuji09s3200

Otagi Nenbutsu-ji (Japanese: 愛宕念仏寺) is a Buddhist temple in the Arashiyama neighborhood of Kyoto, Japan. Otagi Nenbutsu-ji was founded by Empress Shōtoku in the middle of the eighth century. Though was destroyed by the flooding of the Kamo River, it was rebuilt as an offshoot of Enryaku-ji, a nearby temple. In the 13th century, it was again destroyed during a civil war. The temple was moved to its current location in 1922, later suffering typhoon damage in 1950. The gate of the temple contains two fierce-looking Nio statues. Inside the temple are more than 1200 rakan, stone statues representing the disciples of Buddha. These statues, in keeping with rakan traditions, are generally humorous. The sculptures were donated in 1981 in honor of the refurbishment of the temple. Most were carved by amateurs, taught by sculptor Kocho Nishimura.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Otagi Nenbutsu-ji (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Otagi Nenbutsu-ji
愛染橋, Kyoto Ukyo Ward

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N 35.031375 ° E 135.661122 °
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Address

愛宕念仏寺

愛染橋
616-8385 Kyoto, Ukyo Ward
Japan
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Website
otagiji.com

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Otagi nenbutsuji09s3200
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