Category
page 1Buddhist temples in Kanagawa Prefecture

Sōji-ji Temple
is one of two of the Sōtō school of Zen Buddhism. The other is Eihei-ji temple in Fukui Prefecture. ''Fodor's'' calls it "one of the largest and busiest Buddhist institutions in Japan". The temple was founded in 740 as a Shingon Buddhist temple. Keizan, later known as Sōtō's great patriarch Taiso Jōsai Daishi, founded the present temple in 1321, when he renamed it Sōji-ji with the help and patronage of Emperor Go-Daigo. The temple has about twelve buildings in Tsurumi, part of the port city of Yokohama, one designed by the architect Itō Chūta.
Kawasaki Daishi
Buddhist temple in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan
Ryūkō-ji Temple
Buddhist temple in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan
Jōryū-ji Temple
is a Nichiren-shū temple in Katase, Fujisawa, Kanagawa. Its mountain name is .
Iiyama Kannon Temple
Buddhist temple in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan
Shōjōkō-ji Temple
thumb|250px|Hiroshige
is a Buddhist temple located in the city of Fujisawa, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. It is the headquarters of the Ji-shu branch of Pure Land Buddhism, founded in the Kamakura period by Ippen. The formal name of the temple is Tōtaku-san Muryōkō-in Shōjōkō-ji (藤沢山 無量光院 清浄光寺), and its honzon is a statue of Amida Nyorai. As the head priest of the temple, Tōtaku Shōnin, also bears the inherited title Yugyō Shōnin (遊行上人), the temple has become familiarly known as Yugyō-ji (遊行寺) since the Edo period. The temple is also sometimes referred to as Fujisawa-dōjō.
Shōfuku-ji Temple
Buddhist temple in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan
Bandō Sanjūsankasho
Buddhist pilgrimage in Japan