Also known as Kongōshō-ji
is a Rinzai school Zen Buddhist temple in the Asamacho neighborhood of the city of Ise, Mie Prefecture Japan. Its main image is a statue of Kokūzō Bosatsu. Founded in the Asuka period, it has been closely associated with the Ise Grand Shrine throughout its history and contains numerous National Treasures and Important Cultural Properties. The sutra mounds found on Mount Asama behind the temple were designated a National Historic Site in 1936.
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is a Rinzai school Zen Buddhist temple in the Asamacho neighborhood of the city of Ise, Mie Prefecture Japan. Its main image is a statue of Kokūzō Bosatsu. Founded in the Asuka period, it has been closely associated with the Ise Grand Shrine throughout its history and contains numerous National Treasures and Important Cultural Properties. The sutra mounds found on Mount Asama behind the temple were designated a National Historic Site in 1936.
==History== The early history of Kongōshō-ji is uncertain. The temple claims that it was founded by Emperor Kinmei, who ordered the monk Kyōtai to build a chapel on this site in the middle of the 6th century. Later, Kūkai converted this chapel into a dojo for the teaching of Shingon esoteric Buddhism in 825 AD. As Kongōshō-ji is located to the northeast of the Ise Grand Shrine, it was regarded as the protector of the spiritually vulnerable northeastern direction from the shrine. Furthermore, under the Shinbutsu-shūgō doctrines of medieval Japan, Kokūzō Bosatsu was regarded as an avatar of Amaterasu, the principal kami of the Ise Grand Shrine, and thus the temple was regarded as an inner sanctum of that shrine. It attracted many pilgrims and grew to be the largest temple in Ise and Shima Provinces. The temple went into slow decline in the later Heian and Kamakura periods, until the priest Togaku Buniku of Kenchō-ji in Kamakura converted it into a Rinzai Zen temple in 1392. The temple was patronized by the naval commander Kuki Yoshitaka during the Sengoku period, becoming the bodaiji of the Kuki clan. During the Edo period, the temple was supported by the Tokugawa shogunate. Its Hondō was built by Ikeda Terumasa in 1609, and was restored after a fire in 1701 by Keishōin, the mother of Shōgun Tokugawa Tsunayoshi. It is designated a National Important Cultural Property.
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