Sanbutsu-ji Temple
0 sources
Sanbutsu-ji Temple
Summary
Sanbutsu-ji Temple is a Buddhist temple[1]. It draws 41 Wikipedia views per month (buddhist_temple category, ranking #100 of 757).[2]
Key Facts
- Sanbutsu-ji Temple's religion is recorded as Tendai[3].
- Sanbutsu-ji Temple's religion is recorded as Shugendō[4].
- Sanbutsu-ji Temple is located in Misasa[5].
- Sanbutsu-ji Temple is in the country of Japan[6].
- Sanbutsu-ji Temple's instance of is recorded as Buddhist temple[7].
- Sanbutsu-ji Temple's founder is recorded as En no Gyōja[8].
- Sanbutsu-ji Temple is part of Chūgoku 33 Kannon Pilgrimage[9].
- Sanbutsu-ji Temple is part of Top 100 Buildings Selected by Prefectural Citizens[10].
- Sanbutsu-ji Temple's Commons category is recorded as Sanbutsu-ji[11].
- Sanbutsu-ji Temple comprises Nageire-dō[12].
- 706 marks the founding of Sanbutsu-ji Temple[13].
- Sanbutsu-ji Temple's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 35.39931944, 'lon': 133.95576111}[14].
- Sanbutsu-ji Temple's located in/on physical feature is recorded as Mount Mitoku[15].
- Sanbutsu-ji Temple's dedicated to is recorded as Shakyamuni Tathāgata[16].
- Sanbutsu-ji Temple's official website is recorded as http://www.mitokusan.jp/[17].
- Sanbutsu-ji Temple's official website is recorded as https://www.mitokusan.jp/[18].
- Sanbutsu-ji Temple's time of earliest written record is recorded as 1184[19].
- Sanbutsu-ji Temple's heritage designation is recorded as National Treasure of Japan[20].
- Sanbutsu-ji Temple's located in protected area is recorded as Daisen-Oki National Park[21].
- Sanbutsu-ji Temple's street address is recorded as {'lang': 'ja', 'text': '鳥取県東伯郡三朝町三徳1010'}[22].
Body
Founding
Sanbutsu-ji Temple's founder is recorded as En no Gyōja[8]. 706 marks the founding of it[13].
Identity
Part of include Chūgoku 33 Kannon Pilgrimage[9], a Buddhist pilgrimage[23], in Japan[24] and Top 100 Buildings Selected by Prefectural Citizens[10].
Why It Matters
Sanbutsu-ji Temple draws 41 Wikipedia views per month (buddhist_temple category, ranking #100 of 757).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[25]