Bussokuseki-kahi
stone on which the Bussokusekika is written
Press Enter · cited answer in seconds
0 sources
Bussokuseki-kahi
Summary
Bussokuseki-kahi is a stele[1]. Bussokuseki-kahi draws 4 Wikipedia views per month (stele category, ranking #41 of 70).[2]
Key Facts
- Bussokuseki-kahi authored Fun'ya no Kiyomi[3].
- Bussokuseki-kahi is located in Nara Prefecture[4].
- Bussokuseki-kahi is in the country of Japan[5].
- Bussokuseki-kahi's image is recorded as Buddha footprint Poems Stele Total.jpg[6].
- Bussokuseki-kahi's instance of is recorded as stele[7].
- Bussokuseki-kahi's instance of is recorded as archaeological record[8].
- Bussokuseki-kahi's owned by is recorded as Yakushi-ji Temple[9].
- Bussokusekika is named after Bussokuseki-kahi[10].
- Bussokuseki-kahi's collection is recorded as Yakushi-ji Temple[11].
- Bussokuseki-kahi's writing system is recorded as man'yōgana[12].
- Bussokuseki-kahi's Commons category is recorded as Monument with Verses Praising the Buddha's Footprint[13].
- Bussokuseki-kahi's language of work or name is recorded as Old Japanese[14].
- Bussokuseki-kahi's country of origin is recorded as Japan[15].
- +0770-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Bussokuseki-kahi[16].
- Bussokuseki-kahi's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/02pp072[17].
- Bussokuseki-kahi's heritage designation is recorded as Important Cultural Property of Japan[18].
- Bussokuseki-kahi's heritage designation is recorded as National Treasure of Japan[19].
- Bussokuseki-kahi's time period is recorded as Nara period[20].
- Bussokuseki-kahi's Japanese Database of National Cultural Properties ID is recorded as 201/839[21].
Body
Works and Contributions
Bussokuseki-kahi authored Fun'ya no Kiyomi[3].
Why It Matters
Bussokuseki-kahi draws 4 Wikipedia views per month (stele category, ranking #41 of 70).[2]