Kanpuku-ji (Yamakura, Katori)

Kanpuku-ji (観福寺) is a Buddhist temple of the Shingon Buzan Sect located in Yamakura, Katori, Chiba Prefecture. The temple is one of two temples in Katori with the same name, the other being Makinosan Kanpuku-ji.

Kanpuku-ji
観福寺
Kanpuku-ji, Yamakura, Katori, Chiba Prefecture
Religion
AffiliationShingon Buzan Sect
DeityDairoku Ten (大六天)
Location
Location1934-1 Yamakura, Katori, Chiba Prefecture
CountryJapan
Architecture
Completed811
Website
https://web.archive.org/web/20140116091755/http://kanto88.net/kanto88_45.html

History

Kanpuku-ji was, by legend, founded by Kūkai (774 835), the founder of Shingon Buddhism. Kūkai, in a visit to the region, found that residents of the area were suffering from infectious diseases. Kūkai fasted and prayed to Takejizai-ten (他化自在天) and the Kosodate Kannon (子育観音). The residents offered Kūkai salmon from the nearby Kuri River and were suddenly cured.[1] The festival of the temple, held on 7 October annually, includes the offering of a raw salmon during a Buddhist service. The temple was founded by Saichō (767 822), founder of Tendai Buddhism, in his visit to the area. Kanpuku-ji served as an auxiliary temple to the nearby Yamakura Shrine until the Meiji Restoration. In 1871, under the shinbutsu bunri movement, temples and shrines were formally separated. Buddhist objects were removed from the Yamakura Shrine and installed in Kanpuku-ji, a process that lasted into the early 20th century.[2]

Structures

  • Mizuya, a roofed area with a water basin for hand washing
  • Kyakuden, reception hall
  • Kuri, monks' quarters
  • Kōdō, lecture hall
  • Nyōkyōsho, a place of offering of a Buddhist sutra[1]

Order in Buddhist pilgrimage

Kanpuku-ji is the 45th temple in the Kantō Hachijūhachikasho, a pilgrimage circuit of 88 Buddhist temples in the Kantō region of eastern Japan visited by, or associated with Kūkai.[1][3]

Preceded by
Kōzaki-ji (神崎寺)
#44
Kantō Hachijūhachikasho
Kanpuku-ji
#45
Succeeded by
Mangan-ji (満願寺)
(special)

Transportation

Kanpuku-ji is located approximately 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) east of Narita International Airport, but is not easily accessible by public transportation. It can be reached by bus from Sawara Station or Omigawa Station on the JR East Narita Line.

See also

  • For an explanation of terms concerning Japanese Buddhism, Japanese Buddhist art, and Japanese Buddhist temple architecture, see the Glossary of Japanese Buddhism.

References

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