thumb|275 px|Kakurin-ji's Main Hall is an architectural style born in Japan during the Muromachi period from the fusion of elements from three different antecedent styles: wayō, daibutsuyō, and zenshūyō. It is exemplified by the main hall at Kakurin-ji. The combination of wayō and daibutsuyō in particular became so frequent that sometimes it is classed separately by scholars under the name .
thumb|275 px|Kakurin-ji's Main Hall is an architectural style born in Japan during the Muromachi period from the fusion of elements from three different antecedent styles: wayō, daibutsuyō, and zenshūyō. It is exemplified by the main hall at Kakurin-ji. The combination of wayō and daibutsuyō in particular became so frequent that sometimes it is classed separately by scholars under the name .
==See also== Japanese Buddhist architecture - Heian period Daibutsuyō Wayō Zenshūyō
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).