Category
page 1Buddhist temples in Hiroshima Prefecture
Jōdo-ji Temple
Buddhist temple in Onomichi, Hiroshima prefecture, Japan

Buttsū-ji Temple
is a Buddhist temple head one of fourteen autonomous branches of the Rinzai school of Zen Buddhism, founded in 1397 by the lord of Mihara; Kobayakawa Haruhira; its first Abbot was Buttoku Daitsu Zenji. The temple is named after its honorary founder, the Chinese master Buttsu Zenji. Located in Mihara, Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan, the temple is head of the Buttsū-ji branch of Rinzai Zen, governing forty-seven temples.
Mitaki-dera Temple
thumb|Mitaki-dera temple
is a historic Japanese temple in the city of Hiroshima, Japan.
Chūgoku 33 Kannon Pilgrimage
Buddhist temple in Tottori Prefecture, Japan
Daishō-in Temple
thumb|250px|Kannon-dō Hall
thumb|250px|Maniden Hall
thumb|Kobo Daishi image at Daishoin, Miyajima
thumb|250px|Daishō-in temple Jizō statues
thumb|250px|Statues of Benzaiten (Saraswati), [[Kangiten (Ganesh), and Bishamonten (Kubera) in the Daishō-in temple.]]
, also called , is a historic Japanese Buddhist temple complex with many temples and statues on Mount Misen, the holy mountain on the island of Itsukushima, off the coast of Hatsukaichi, Hiroshima, Japan. It is the 14th temple in the Chūgoku 33 Kannon Pilgrimage and famous for the maple trees and their autumn colors. Including Mt. Misen, D
Kōsan-ji Temple
is a Hongan-ji school Jōdo Shinshū temple on the island of Ikuchijima in Onomichi, Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan. Founded by the industrialist Kōzō Kanamoto (later Koso Kōsanji) in 1936 in honour of his deceased mother, and with an area of approximately fifty thousand square metres, many of its structures are modelled upon the country's most famous historic temples and shrines. The is a monument landscaped with five thousand square metres of Carrara marble, weighing some three thousand tons, by Kazuto Kuetani. The Kōsan-ji Museum houses over two thousand items, including nineteen Important Cultu
Senkō Temple
Buddhist temple in Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan
Myōō-in Temple
thumb|250px|Myōō-in, the tō|five-storied pagoda, A National Treasure
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