is a generic Japanese term for gate often used, either alone or as a suffix, in referring to the many gates used by Buddhist temples, Shinto shrines and traditional-style buildings and castles.
Significance
Unlike gates of secular buildings, most temple and shrine gates are purely symbolic elements of liminality, as they cannot be completely closed and just mark the transition between the mundane and the sacred. In many cases, for example that of the sanmon, a temple gate has purifying, cleansing properties.
Description
Gate size is measured in ken, where a ken is the interval between two pillars of a traditional-style building. A temple's rÃ
Âmon for example can have dimensions from a maximum of 5x2 ken to a more common 3x2 ken, down to even one ken. The word is usually translated in English as "bay" and is better understood as an indication of proportions than as a unit of measurement.
Like the temples they belong to, gates can be in the wayÃ
Â, daibutsuyÃ
Â, zen'yÃ
 or setchÃ
«yÃ
 style. They can be named after:
- Their location, as the or of the or the .
- The deity they house, as the NiÃ
Âmon (lit. "NiÃ
 gate", see below), a gate enshrining two gods called NiÃ
 in its outer bays.
- Their structure or shape, as the nijÃ
«mon (lit. "two-story gate", see below) and the rÃ
Âmon (lit. tower gate).
- Their function, as the sanmon (see below), which is the most important gate of a Zen or JÃ
Âdo temple.
Not all such terms are mutually exclusive and the same gate may be called with different names according to the situation. For example, a NiÃ
Âmon can also be correctly called a nijÃ
«mon if it has two stories.
Variations
Very different structurally from the others is the toriimon (normally called simply torii), a two-legged gate in stone or wood regularly associated with Shinto, but common also within Japanese Buddhist temples. As prominent a temple as Osaka's ShitennÃ
Â-ji, founded in 593 by ShÃ
Âtoku Taishi and the oldest state-built Buddhist temple in the country, has a torii straddling one of its entrances. The origins of the torii are unknown; although several theories on the subject exist, none has gained universal acceptance. Because the use of symbolic gates is widespread in AsiaâÂÂsuch structures can be found for example in India, China, Vietnam, Thailand, Korea, and within Nicobarese and Shompen villagesâÂÂhistorians believe it may be an imported tradition. It most often symbolically marks the entrance of a Shinto shrine. For this reason, it is never closed.
Common types
- â so called because of its eight secondary pillars, which support four main pillars standing under the gate's ridge. It therefore really has twelve pillars altogether.
- â A gate in a wall consisting in just two square posts.
- â A gate in a wall formed by two square posts and a horizontal beam.
- â A gate characterized by a karahafu, an undulating bargeboard peculiar to Japan. Karamon are used at Japanese castles, Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines.
- â Used at castles, temples and daimyÃ
 residences, it consists of a tiled, gabled roof on two pillars, plus two smaller roofs over the on the rear of the gate.
- . A defensive structure consisting in a courtyard along the wall of a castle with two gates set at a square angle, one giving access to the castle and one facing the outside. The external gate is typically a kÃ
Âraimon, the internal one a yaguramon. The Sakuradamon at Tokyo's Imperial Palace is such a gate.
- â A gate formed by two pillars sustaining a gabled roof. Similar to a kÃ
Âraimon, but lacking the roofed secondary pillars.
- lit. nagaya gate â A nagaya, literally a long house, was a row house where low status samurai used to live, and the nagayamon was a gate that allowed traffic from one side of the structure to the other.
- NijÃ
«mon â A two-storied gate with a pent roof between the two stories. Distinguishable from the similar rÃ
Âmon for having a pent roof between stories.
- NiÃ
Âmon â A gate enshrining in its two outer bays the statues of two warden gods, the NiÃ
Â.
- RÃ
Âmon â A two-storied, single roofed gate where the second story is inaccessible and offers no usable room. Distinguishable from the similar nijÃ
«mon for not having a pent roof between stories.
- Sanmon â The most important gate of a Japanese Zen Buddhist temple. Also used by other schools, particularly the JÃ
Âdo. Its importance notwithstanding, the sanmon is not the first gate of the temple, and in fact it usually stands between the sÃ
Âmon (outer gate) and the butsuden (lit. "Hall of Buddha", i.e. the main hall).
- SÃ
Âmon â the gate at the entrance of a temple. It often precedes the bigger and more important sanmon.
- Torii â This distinctive symbolic gate is usually associated with Shinto shrines; however, it is common at Buddhist temples too, as most have at least one.
- â Gates opened in a castle wall. Because they were used to connect surfaces at different levels, they looked as if they were buried in the ground.
- â A gate with a yagura on top.
- â A gate having no pillars under the ridge of its gabled gate, and supported by four pillars at its corners.
- â so called because of its four secondary pillars which support two main pillars standing under the gate's ridge. It therefore really has six pillars.
Photo gallery
References