Ryūsen-ji Temple
0 sources
Ryūsen-ji Temple
Summary
Ryūsen-ji Temple is a Buddhist temple[1].
Key Facts
- Ryūsen-ji Temple's religion is recorded as Shingon-shū Daigo-ha[2].
- Ryūsen-ji Temple is located in Tenkawa[3].
- Ryūsen-ji Temple is in the country of Japan[4].
- Ryūsen-ji Temple's image is recorded as 龍泉寺八大龍王堂.jpg[5].
- Ryūsen-ji Temple's instance of is recorded as Buddhist temple[6].
- Ryūsen-ji Temple's instance of is recorded as Hachidai Ryūō Shrines[7].
- Ryūsen-ji Temple's coat of arms image is recorded as Naraken ryusenji.png[8].
- Ryūsen-ji Temple's founder is recorded as En no Gyōja[9].
- Ryūsen-ji Temple's location is recorded as Dorogawa Onsen[10].
- Ryūsen-ji Temple's postal code is recorded as 638-0431[11].
- Ryūsen-ji Temple's part of is recorded as Kinki Thirty-six Fudoson Sacred Ground[12].
- Ryūsen-ji Temple's part of is recorded as En no Gyōja Reiseki Fudasho[13].
- Ryūsen-ji Temple's Commons category is recorded as Ryusenji (Tenkawa, Nara)[14].
- Ryūsen-ji Temple's coordinate location is recorded as {'globe': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q2', 'altitude': None, 'latitude': 34.269447, 'longitude': 135.878936, 'precision': 1e-06}[15].
- Ryūsen-ji Temple's dedicated to is recorded as Maitreya[16].
- Ryūsen-ji Temple's official website is recorded as https://www.ohminesan-ryusenji.or.jp/[17].
- Ryūsen-ji Temple's legal form is recorded as religious corporation[18].
- Ryūsen-ji Temple's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/122rvws5[19].
- Ryūsen-ji Temple's TripAdvisor ID is recorded as 1386023[20].
- Ryūsen-ji Temple's Corporate Number is recorded as 7150005007366[21].
- Ryūsen-ji Temple's street address is recorded as 奈良県吉野郡天川村大字洞川494[22].
- Ryūsen-ji Temple's street address is recorded as 494, Ōaza Dorogawa, Tenkawa-mura, Yoshino-gun, Nara-ken 638-0431[23].
- Ryūsen-ji Temple's image of entrance is recorded as 龍泉寺総門.jpg[24].
Body
Founding
Ryūsen-ji Temple's founder is recorded as En no Gyōja[9].
Identity
Part of include Kinki Thirty-six Fudoson Sacred Ground[12], a Buddhist pilgrimage[25], in Japan[26], founded in 1979[27], headquartered in Kawachinagano[28] and En no Gyōja Reiseki Fudasho[13], a pilgrimage site[29], in Japan[30], founded in 2001[31].