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・ Jōmō-Kōgen Station
・ Jōnan, Kumamoto
・ Jōnan-ku, Fukuoka
・ Jōnetsu
・ Jōnetsu (Ua song)
・ Jōnetsu (Yuki Saito song)
・ Jōnetsu no Bara
・ Jōnetsu no Daishō/Escape
・ Jōno Station
・ Jōno Station (JR Kyushu)
・ Jōno Station (Kitakyushu Monorail)
・ Jōren Falls
・ Jōro Station
・ Jōruri
・ Jōruri (music)
Jōruri-ji
・ Jōryaku
・ Jōryū-Ji
・ Jōsei Toda
・ Jōshin Dentetsu Jōshin Line
・ Jōshin Station
・ Jōshin'etsu-kōgen National Park
・ Jōshin-etsu Expressway
・ Jōshō-ji
・ Jōshū
・ Jōshū-Fukushima Station
・ Jōshū-Ichinomiya Station
・ Jōshū-Nanokaichi Station
・ Jōshū-Niiya Station
・ Jōshū-Tomioka Station


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Jōruri-ji : ウィキペディア英語版
Jōruri-ji

is a temple of the school of Pure Land Buddhism with an historic Japanese garden located in Kizugawa, Kyoto Prefecture, in Japan. It is one of the few remaining examples of a Paradise garden of the early Heian Period. The three-storied pagoda, the main hall (hondō), the group of nine sitting Amida Nyorai statues and the group of Four Heavenly Kings are designated as National Treasures.
==The Temple==
The Jōruri-ji Temple was founded in 1047 by the Priest Eshin. Like other temples of Pure Land Buddhism, it is laid out around a large pond, which represents the ocean which separates birth and death. In the center of the pond is an island symbolizing earth, connected to the shore by a stone slab bridge. On the west side of the pond is the Amida Hall or Paradise Hall, which symbolizes the Western Paradise of Amida Nyorai. To the east of the lake is a three-story pagoda which represents the Eastern Paradise of Yakushi Nyorai, the Buddha of healing. Worshippers could stand on the east side of the pond and face west toward the Paradise Hall.〔Young and Young, ''The Art of the Japanese Garden'', pg. 94〕
The Paradise Hall at Jōruri-ji contains nine statues of the Amida Buddha, each one symbolizing one of the nine stages of Nirvana. It was constructed in 1107 and moved to its present location in 1157. The temple also has a pagoda, moved to its present site from Kyoto in 1178.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Jōruri-ji」の詳細全文を読む



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