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Tango Kokubun-ji

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Tango Kokubun-ji
丹後国分寺
Tango Kokubun-ji Hondō
Religion
AffiliationBuddhist
DeityYakushi Nyōrai
RiteShingon
Location
Location59 Kokubun, Miyazu-shi, Kyoto-fu 629-2234
CountryJapan Japan
Tango Kokubun-ji is located in Kyoto Prefecture
Tango Kokubun-ji
Tango Kokubun-ji
Tango Kokubun-ji is located in Japan
Tango Kokubun-ji
Tango Kokubun-ji (Japan)
Geographic coordinates35°34′48.20″N 135°10′48.20″E / 35.5800556°N 135.1800556°E / 35.5800556; 135.1800556
Architecture
FounderEmperor Shōmu
Completedc.741
Map

Tango Kokubun-ji (丹後国分寺) is a Shingon-sect Buddhist temple in the Kokubu neighborhood of the city of Miyazu, Kyoto, Japan. It is one of the few surviving provincial temples established by Emperor Shōmu during the Nara period (710–794).[1] Due to this connection, the foundation stones of the Nara period temple now located to the south of the present day complex were designated as a National Historic Site in 1916.[2]

History

The Shoku Nihongi records that in 741, as the country recovered from a major smallpox epidemic, Emperor Shōmu ordered that a monastery and nunnery be established in every province, the kokubunji (国分寺).[3][4] These temples were built to a semi-standardized template, and served both to spread Buddhist orthodoxy to the provinces, and to emphasize the power of the Nara period centralized government under the Ritsuryō system.[5]

The Tango Kokubun-ji is located is located on an alluvial fan that gently descends south from Mt. Nariai, southeast of the Tango Peninsula. The exact date of the temple's foundation is unknown; but is believed that work started around 741 AD as it is mentioned in historical records from 756 in a list of 26 kokubun-ji in various provinces, and roof tiles from this period have also been found on the site. The temple's name appears repeatedly in Heian period records, including the Engishiki of 927 AD. During the Kamakura period, the temple apparently suffered from a calamity during which its gold and bronze main image, a statue of Yakushi Nyōrai was stolen. The temple was reconstructed, and its new pagoda appears in Sesshū Tōyō's early Muromachi period painting of Ama-no-Hashidate. It was destroyed again in 1507 during the invasion of Tango Province by the Takeda clan of Wakasa Province, and once again in 1542. In the early Edo period, the temple was swept away by a flood in 1683, after which it was rebuilt on a much smaller scale on the hill to the north, where it is now located.[6]

The site of the original temple has been known since antiquity. The Kondō and Middle Gate were aligned north to south, with a Pagoda on the west. Currently, the foundation stones for the Kondō remain in situ, indicating a structure that is five by six bays in size. This corresponds to the building as depicted in the Kamakura period "Tango Kokubunji Revival Engi". Only two cornerstones for the Middle Gate survive, and the building is not depicted in the "Tango Kokubunji Revival Engi"; however, it is shown in the painting by Sesshū. Likewise, the Pagoda is not depicted in the Kamakura period "Tango Kokubunji Revival Engi", but is shown by Sesshū as a five-story structure. Currently, sixteen foundation stones remain in situ. It is believed that all of these foundation stones are not the Nara period original foundations, but date from the 1334 reconstruction.

Currently, the area around the ruins of Kokubunji has been maintained as a park and is open to the public. Adjacent to the north side is the Kyoto Prefectural Tango Folk Museum (京都府立丹後郷土資料館, Kyōtofuritsu Tango Kyōdo Shiryōkan), which displays some of the excavated roof tiles and related materials. The temple site is a five minute walk from the "Tango Museum Mae" bus stoops the Tango Kairiku Bus from Iwatakiguchi Station.[6]

Cultural Properties

National Important Cultural Properties

  • "Tango Kokubunji Revival Engi" (丹後国分寺再興縁起), Nanboku-chō period, document recording the history of the reconstruction of Tango Kokubun-ji from 1328 to 1334. It is one of the few historical materials that reveals the circumstances of the construction of local temples in the Middle Ages, and the only historical material that concretely shows the reconstruction activities of kokubunji in the western part of Japan from the late Kamakura period to the Nanboku-chō period. The document was designated as a Kyoto Prefecture Tangible Cultural Property in 1990 and re-designated as a national Important Cultural Property in 1992.[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Kokubunji". Encyclopedia of Japan. Tokyo: Shogakukan. 2012. Archived from the original on 2007-08-25. Retrieved 2012-05-04.
  2. ^ "丹後国分寺跡" (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Retrieved August 20, 2020.
  3. ^ Brown, Delmer M. (1993). Cambridge History of Japan vol. I. Cambridge University Press. p. 255.
  4. ^ Yiengpruksawan, Mimi Hall (1998). Hiraizumi: Buddhist Art and Regional Politics in Twelfth-Century Japan. Harvard University Press. pp. 22f.
  5. ^ Shively, Donald H.; McCullough, William H. (1999). Cambridge History of Japan vol. II (p.31f.). Cambridge University Press.
  6. ^ a b Isomura, Yukio; Sakai, Hideya (2012). (国指定史跡事典) National Historic Site Encyclopedia. 学生社. ISBN 978-4311750403.(in Japanese)
  7. ^ "丹後国分寺再興縁起" (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Retrieved March 3, 2021.