Saioku-ji explained

Saioku-ji
Native Name:柴屋寺
Map Type:Japan Shizuoka Prefecture#Japan
Map Alt:Location in Japan
Relief:1
Location:Mariko 3316, Suruga-ku, Shizuoka-shi, Shizuoka 411-0037
Religious Affiliation:Buddhism
Rite:Rinzai school of Japanese Zen
Deity:Jūichimen Kannon
Country: Japan
Founded By:Imagawa Ujichika
Year Completed:1504

is a Buddhist temple belonging to the Myōshin-ji branch of Rinzai school of Japanese Zen located in Mariko-juku, Suruga-ku, Shizuoka, Japan. Its main image is a statue of Jūichimen Kannon. The Japanese garden at this temple was designated a National Historic Site of Japan in 1936 and National Place of Scenic Beauty, with the borders of the historical site expanded in 1970.[1]

History

Saioku-ji was founded in 1504 by Imagawa Ujichika, on the site of the hermitage of Sōchō (1448-1542), the noted renga poet and adviser to his father, Imagawa Yoshitada. After the fall of the Imagawa clan, the temple received the patronage of the Tokugawa shogunate. [2]

The temple was nicknamed "temple of the moon" or "temple of bamboo" in literature and memorialized in haiku and other poetry by travelers on the Tōkaidō. Its Japanese garden makes use of the borrowed scenery technique, incorporating views of surrounding mountains, and is patterned after the garden of Ginkaku-ji in Kyoto. The garden includes an artificial hill with a "moon-viewing stone" on which Sōchō sat while he composed poetry. The precincts include a shoin and a chashitsu in a bamboo grove that was transplanted from Higashiyama in Kyoto.[2]

The temple is a ten-minute walk from the "Togepposaioku" bus stop on the Shizutetsu bus from Shizuoka Station.[2]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 柴屋寺庭園. Japanese . . August 20, 2020.
  2. Book: Isomura . Yukio . Sakai . Hideya . (国指定史跡事典) National Historic Site Encyclopedia . 2012 . 学生社 . 4311750404.