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Heian Jogakuin University

2000 establishments in JapanAnglican Church in JapanChristian universities and colleges in JapanKansai university stubsOsaka university stubs
Private universities and colleges in JapanTakatsuki, OsakaUniversities and colleges established in 2000Universities and colleges in Kyoto PrefectureUniversities and colleges in Osaka PrefectureWomen's universities and colleges in Japan
Kyoto St Agnes Episcopal Church02st3200
Kyoto St Agnes Episcopal Church02st3200

Heian Jogakuin University (平安女学院大学, Heian jogakuin daigaku) also known at St. Agnes' University, is a private women's college with campuses in Kyoto, Kyoto and Takatsuki, Osaka in Japan. The university's foundation history can be traced through the establishment of St. Agnes' School to 1875. The university received its official charter as an accredited four year university in 2000. The university is an affiliated educational institution of the Nippon Sei Ko Kai, the province of the Anglican Communion in Japan.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Heian Jogakuin University (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Heian Jogakuin University
Muromachi street, Kyoto Kamigyo Ward

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 35.019655555556 ° E 135.75833055556 °
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Address

平安女学院大学 京都キャンパス

Muromachi street
602-8021 Kyoto, Kamigyo Ward
Japan
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Kyoto St Agnes Episcopal Church02st3200
Kyoto St Agnes Episcopal Church02st3200
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Nearby Places

Rozan-ji
Rozan-ji

Rozan-ji (Japanese: 廬山寺, or Rozan Tendaikoji) is a Tendai Buddhist temple in Kamigyō-ku, Kyoto and the head temple (honzan) of the Enjo (圓浄) sect. The sangō (literally, mountain name) of Rozan-ji is Mount Lu, or Lushan, pronounced rozan in Japanese. Currently located on the eastern side of the Kyoto Imperial Palace, it was founded by Ryōgen, the abbot of Enryaku-ji, in 938 in the Funaokayama neighborhood, south of Daitoku-ji. It was one of four temples that had an okurodo (御黒戸), a private Buddhist chapel for the Imperial Family, originally located in the Imperial Palace. These temples, the others being Nison-in, Hanjū-in, and Kengō-in, belong directly to the Imperial Household. The temple was protected from destruction by a nyōbō hosho, an official document recording the orders and words of the emperor written by the female court member, Madenokoji Fusako, during Oda Nobunaga assault on Kyoto temples, specifically the Tendai branch, and the siege of Mount Hiei. In 1573 it was moved to its present location on Teramachi Street as part of Toyotomi Hideyoshi's reorganization of Kyoto. The reconstruction was completed under the directive of Emperor Kōkaku. The reconstructed temple was devastated in the Kyoto fire in 1708 (Hōei 5) and again in 1788 (Tenmei 8) during the Great Fire of Kyoto. The present structure was rebuilt in 1794 (Kansei 6) from a portion of the Sentō Imperial Palace. The rock garden of the temple is known as the Genji Garden (源氏庭), after the titular character in the Tale of Genji, and is noted for its Japanese bellflowers.