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Takidan-ji

is a Buddhist temple located in the city of Sakai, Fukui, Japan, in the Hokuriku region of Japan. It belongs to the Shingon-shū Chizan-ha sectIts main image is a statue of Yakushi Nyōrai, which the temple claims was carved by the Nara period shugendō monk Taichō. The temple is noted for its Japanese garden, which has been designated as a National Place of Scenic Beauty.

History

Takidan-ji was founded in 1377 AD and moved to its present location in 1381. During the Muromachi period it was patronized by the Asakura clan and during the Sengoku period by Shibata Katsuie. Under the Edo period Tokugawa shogunate, it was patronized by the Matsudaira clan, daimyō of Fukui Domain and had many sub-temples. Following the Meiji restoration, the temple became much reduced in scale. Many of its surviving structures date from the Edo period, and are National Important Cultural Properties.

The temple is located a ten minute walk from Mikuni Station on the Echizen Railway Mikuni Awara Line.

Cultural Properties

National Treasure

  • , Heian period, gilt bronze Buddhist ritual gong with hōsōge flower design.

National Important Cultural Properties

  • , mid-Edo period, completed in 1688.
  • , Muromachi period, reconstructed in 1633.
  • , mid-Edo period, reconsructed in 1698.It is said to have been donated by Shibata Katsuie.
  • , mid-Edo period, completed in 1689.
  • , late Muromachi period, (1467-1572).
  • , late Muromachi period, completed in 1572.
  • ; Kamakura period, colored paint on silk
  • , mid-Muromachi period,

National Place of Scenic Beauty

  • ; Edo period; located adjacent to the Hondo

See also

References

External links