ENTRANCE TO JAPANESE BUDDHIST TEMPLE AT - TopicsExpress



          

ENTRANCE TO JAPANESE BUDDHIST TEMPLE AT NIGHT yurukaze/meanwhile-in-japan/entrance-to-japanese-buddhist-temple-at-night/ The clear separation between Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines, which today is the norm, emerges only as a result of the shinbutsu bunri (“separation of kami and Buddhas”) law of 1868. This separation was mandated by law, and many shrine-temples were forced to become just shrines, among them famous ones like Usa Hachiman-gū and Tsurugaoka Hachiman-gū. Because mixing the two religions was now forbidden, jingūji had to give away some of their properties or dismantle some of their buildings, thus damaging the integrity of their cultural heritage and decreasing the historical and economic value of their properties. For example, Tsurugaoka Hachiman-gū’s giant Niō (the two wooden wardens usually found at the sides of a temple’s entrance), being objects of Buddhist worship and therefore illegal where they were, were sold to Jufuku-ji, where they still are. The shrine-temple also had to destroy Buddhism-related buildings, for example its tahōtō, its midō, and its shichidō garan.
Posted on: Sun, 31 Aug 2014 12:50:55 +0000

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