Kita-in Temple
0 sources
Kita-in Temple
Summary
Kita-in Temple is a Buddhist temple[1]. It draws 7 Wikipedia views per month (buddhist_temple category, ranking #108 of 757).[2]
Key Facts
- Kita-in Temple's religion is recorded as Tendai[3].
- Kita-in Temple is located in Kawagoe[4].
- Kita-in Temple is in the country of Japan[5].
- Kita-in Temple's image is recorded as Kawagoe Kitain Main Hall 202011.jpg[6].
- Kita-in Temple's instance of is recorded as Buddhist temple[7].
- Kita-in Temple's instance of is recorded as chokugan-ji[8].
- Kita-in Temple's commissioned by is recorded as Emperor Junna[9].
- Kita-in Temple's founder is recorded as Ennin[10].
- north is named after Kita-in Temple[11].
- Kita-in Temple's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 146575530[12].
- Kita-in Temple's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as n80019903[13].
- Kita-in Temple's postal code is recorded as 350-0036[14].
- Kita-in Temple's NDL Authority ID is recorded as 00260876[15].
- Kita-in Temple's part of is recorded as Kantō 36 Fudō Pilgrimage[16].
- Kita-in Temple's part of is recorded as Q11462229[17].
- Kita-in Temple's Commons category is recorded as Kitain[18].
- +0830-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Kita-in Temple[19].
- Kita-in Temple's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 35.917525, 'lon': 139.48906667}[20].
- Kita-in Temple's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/03d4fkt[21].
- Kita-in Temple's dedicated to is recorded as Amitābha Buddha[22].
- Kita-in Temple's official website is recorded as https://www.kawagoe.com/kitain/[23].
- Kita-in Temple's OpenCorporates ID is recorded as jp/3030005008082[24].
- Kita-in Temple's heritage designation is recorded as Important Cultural Property of Japan[25].
- Kita-in Temple's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'ja', 'text': '星野山無量寿寺喜多院'}[26].
- Kita-in Temple's name in kana is recorded as きたいん[27].
Body
Founding
Kita-in Temple's founder is recorded as Ennin[10]. +0830-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of it[19].
Identity
Part of include Kantō 36 Fudō Pilgrimage[16], a pilgrims' way[28], in Japan[29] and Q11462229[17], a pilgrims' way[30], in Japan[31].
Why It Matters
Kita-in Temple draws 7 Wikipedia views per month (buddhist_temple category, ranking #108 of 757).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[32] It is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[33]