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よっしー「プロフ見てね」
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Frequently featured in the media as a famous spot for autumn leaves, in the fall, 200 ancient trees with vibrant red leaves fill the temple grounds and approach. Kogosan Keisokuji Temple is a Shingon sect Buzan school temple located in Nagahama City, Shiga Prefecture. It was a sacred site for mountain worship and was located in the mountains of Kogosan (923m). The temple buildings were destroyed by fire in 1933, and it was virtually abandoned thereafter, but the Buddhist statues that had been handed down were enshrined in a storage house and managed by local residents. It is famous as a place for autumn leaves and is crowded with many tourists in the fall. The following four items are provided: 1. Goshuin (temple stamp) Keisokuji Temple's principal image: Eleven-faced Kannon 2. Goshuin Toiwaji Temple: Gyoran Kannon 3. Goshuin Toiwaji Temple: Yakushi Nyorai 4. The History of Kogosan and the Buddhas (two-fold) Kogosan The six Jizo statues, said to be the oldest in Omi, the Ushidome rock, and the Keisokuji Temple ruins, the site of the head temple of the seven Kogosan temples that flourished in the Heian period, still have stone pagodas that remind us of the temple's appearance. Keisokuji Temple is an ancient temple founded in 735 by the monk Gyoki. Although it was once ruined, it was revived in 799 by Saicho. It was one of the Betsuin (branch temples) of Kogosan Keisokuji Temple, which boasted a majestic appearance as a sacred place of mountain Buddhism. In the medieval period, it was a large temple that had armed monks and continued a stable temple fortune under the protection of the powerful people of the time, but it declined with the end of the Edo shogunate. The principal image (Eleven-faced Kannon statue) is enshrined in the Kokokaku. Along with the adjacent Yoshirokaku, many cultural assets, including the important cultural properties of the Yakushi Nyorai statue and the Twelve Heavenly Generals statues, as well as prefectural designated cultural properties, are preserved.
3 weeks ago