Also known as Rokuon-ji
thumb|Kinkaku-ji, Kyoto, 2024 , officially named , is a Zen Buddhist temple in Kyoto, Japan and a tourist attraction. It is designated as a World Heritage Site, a National Special Historic Site, a National Special Landscape, and one of the 17 Historic Monuments of Ancient Kyoto. The temple is nicknamed after its reliquary (shariden), the , whose top two floors are coated in 0.5 μm gold leaf. The current pavilion was rebuilt in 1955 after being destroyed in an arson attack.
Kinkaku-ji is a Zen Buddhist temple in Kyoto, Japan, famous for its stunning golden pavilion whose top two floors are covered in gold leaf, making it one of Japan's most iconic landmarks and a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The temple holds significant cultural importance as a National Special Historic Site and National Special Landscape, though the current structure dates to 1955 after the original was destroyed by arson.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
Złoty Pawilon (jap. 金閣寺 Kinkaku-ji; Świątynia Złotego Pawilonu), oficjalna nazwa Rokuon-ji (jap. 鹿苑寺 Świątynia w Ogrodzie Jeleni) – świątynia zen w Kioto. Budynek reprezentuje tzw. kulturę z okresu Muromachi.
Abstract from DBpedia / Wikipedia · CC BY-SA
3 mapped locations
via Wikipedia infobox
via Wikidata · CC0
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).