Tag: Japan
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Taking the train
I took the train to Temple 79. There, I met a Taiwanese tour group. They sent me a picture of myself praying at one of the temples. Temple 79 – Tennōji. Founded by Gyōki during the 8th century. During the 1800s, there was a forced separation between Buddhism and Shintoism. The original temple was moved…
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After the cab
I am about 2 days behind on posts. I got dropped off at Temple 78 – Gōshōji. Believed to have been started in the early 8th century, Kūkai came upon it and restored the dilapidated buildings. For a while, the temple prospered as a nenbutsu training site. There was a stairway down, almost like a…
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A rough day.
Ok, so I hit temple 76 yesterday, I was tired of posting, so I put it off to today. I stayed in a place called mi casa su casa. It was a bunk room, it was nice and comfortable and the woman who ran it was amazing. So Temple 76 – Konzōji was in a…
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1 more update
After 74, I moved onto Temple 75 Zentsūji. This was a sprawling temple that went over 2 blocks, and I could not take a picture of the 20-30 foot statue. This is the birthplace of Kūkai 774 – 835. https://english.kyodonews.net/news/2020/12/047d86631ba3-zentsuji-temples-buddha-statue-gets-clean-before-new-year.html
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14 miles continued
Next, I walked down to temple 72 – Mandalaji. Built in 596, built to be the clan temple for the Saeki family, Kūkai’s ancestors. After returning from China, he dedicated the Kongōkai, and Taizōkai Mandala and changed the name of the temple. Moving onto Temple 74 – Kōyamaji. When Kūkai was thinking of building a…
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14 miles walked
Woke up this morning and walked to the train station to get near the next temple. Temple 71 – Iyadaniji was uphill 221 meters, but it wasn’t a bad walk. Gyōki founded the temple, and it was called the 8 province Temple because from here, you could see the 8 surrounding provinces. Kūkai visited in…
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Been traveling in Japan for 1 month now
Temple 70 – Motoyamaji. In 807 Kūkai founded and constructed this Temple according to the wish of Emperor Heizei. It is said this Temple avoided any destruction, and there are legends regarding the buildings being protected by a statue of Amida or a swarm of bees.
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Temples next to each other
So Temples 68 and 69 are within 300 feet of each other. Temple 68 – Jinnein founded in 703 by Buddhist priest Nisshō. In 807 Kūkai arrived and drew a picture of Amida Nyorai, and in the 19th century, it was moved to the temple next door, Temple 69 – Kannonji. I then started my…
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An accidental easy day.
When trying to plan places to stay several days out, I didn’t plan on hitting Temple 67 yesterday, so today was 3 temples. Two of which were right next to each other. I grabbed a bus down to close to Temples 68 and 69. I saw a Shinto Temple close to it and decided I…
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Decisions
After I took the gondola down, I had to decide on walking to the next temple or take buses. I could walk there faster, so I decided to do that, even though I had my full bag with me. Most days, I try to leave my big bag at the hotel and only take a…