Taiseki-ji Temple
0 sources
Taiseki-ji Temple
Summary
Taiseki-ji Temple is a Buddhist temple[1]. It draws 44 Wikipedia views per month (buddhist_temple category, ranking #79 of 757).[2]
Key Facts
- Taiseki-ji Temple's religion is recorded as Nichiren Shōshū[3].
- Taiseki-ji Temple is located in Fujinomiya[4].
- Taiseki-ji Temple is in the country of Japan[5].
- Taiseki-ji Temple is on the body of water Urui River[6].
- Taiseki-ji Temple's image is recorded as Sanmon of Taiseki-ji in 2009-11.jpg[7].
- Taiseki-ji Temple's instance of is recorded as Buddhist temple[8].
- Taiseki-ji Temple's founder is recorded as Nikkō[9].
- Taiseki-ji Temple's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 213369721[10].
- Taiseki-ji Temple's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as n82032180[11].
- Taiseki-ji Temple's IdRef ID is recorded as 15210450X[12].
- Taiseki-ji Temple's NACSIS-CAT author ID is recorded as DA12169483[13].
- Taiseki-ji Temple's postal code is recorded as 418-0116[14].
- Taiseki-ji Temple's NDL Authority ID is recorded as 00304048[15].
- Taiseki-ji Temple's part of is recorded as eight temples of Kōmon[16].
- Taiseki-ji Temple's part of is recorded as Fuji Five Mountains[17].
- Taiseki-ji Temple's Commons category is recorded as Taiseki-ji[18].
- Taiseki-ji Temple's chairperson is recorded as Nichinyo[19].
- Taiseki-ji Temple's has part is recorded as Hoando[20].
- Taiseki-ji Temple's has part is recorded as Q11445506[21].
- Taiseki-ji Temple's has part is recorded as Mieidō[22].
- Taiseki-ji Temple's has part is recorded as Sanmon[23].
- Taiseki-ji Temple's has part is recorded as Gojū-no-tō[24].
- Taiseki-ji Temple's has part is recorded as Kyakuden, Taiseki-ji[25].
- Taiseki-ji Temple's has part is recorded as Mutsubo[26].
- Taiseki-ji Temple's has part is recorded as Daikodo, Taiseki-ji[27].
Body
Founding
Taiseki-ji Temple's founder is recorded as Nikkō[9]. +1290-11-15T00:00:00Z marks the founding of it[28].
Identity
Official names include {'lang': 'ja', 'text': '多宝富士大日蓮華山大石寺'}[29] and {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'Taho Fuji Dainichirenge-san Taisekiji'}[30]. Part of include eight temples of Kōmon[16], a group of structures or buildings[31], in Japan[32] and Fuji Five Mountains[17], a group of structures or buildings[33], in Japan[34].
Leadership
Taiseki-ji Temple's chairperson is recorded as Nichinyo[19].
Why It Matters
Taiseki-ji Temple draws 44 Wikipedia views per month (buddhist_temple category, ranking #79 of 757).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[35]