is a private museum of artefacts handed down by the Kikkawa clan, daimyÃ
 of Iwakuni Domain, in Iwakuni, Yamaguchi Prefecture, Japan. Located between Kintai-kyÃ
 bridge and Iwakuni Castle and opened by the in 1995, the museum's collection totals some seven thousand items, including materials from the Heian and Kamakura periods, a painting attributed to SesshÃ
«, and one National Treasure. There are four changing displays each year. Other materials once owned by the Kikkawa clan are on display at Iwakuni ChÃ
Âkokan.
Highlights of the collection
- , from the Kamakura period (National Treasure)
- , traditionally attributed to SesshÃ
« TÃ
ÂyÃ
Â; with by , who journeyed twice on Japanese missions to Ming China, the second time with SesshÃ
« accompanying (Prefectural Tangible Cultural Property)
- , from the Momoyama period; said to have been bestowed upon Kikkawa Hiroie by Toyotomi Hideyoshi in 1587 after his campaign in KyÃ
«shÃ
« (Important Cultural Property)
- : 102 items dating from the Kamakura to the Edo period (ICP); a further 32 items, plus a catalogue, from the Meiji period (Municipal Tangible Cultural Property)
- Azuma Kagami: 48 volumes, from the Muromachi period (1522) (ICP)
- GenkÃ
 Shakusho: 15 volumes, in the hand of , from the Muromachi period (ICP)
- Taiheiki: 40 volumes, in the hand of Kikkawa Motoharu, from the Muromachi period (1563âÂÂ65) (ICP)
- Lotus SÃ
«tra in fine lettering, 8 scrolls: from the Heian period; formerly a temple treasure of Ninna-ji, later presented to , as attested in the letter of transfer (ICP)
- Portrait of
<br />
See also
References
External links