Tōshō-ji (original) (raw)
Le Tōshō-ji (東勝寺) était le temple familial (bodaiji) du clan Hōjō à Kamakura durant l'époque de Kamakura. Fondé par Taikō Gyōyū, il est construit en 1237 par Hōjō Yasutoki en mémoire de sa mère qui y est enterrée. Selon le Taiheiki, de sa fondation jusqu'à la fin du shogunat Kamakura, chaque shikken (régent) y est enterré.
Property | Value |
---|---|
dbo:abstract | Le Tōshō-ji (東勝寺) était le temple familial (bodaiji) du clan Hōjō à Kamakura durant l'époque de Kamakura. Fondé par Taikō Gyōyū, il est construit en 1237 par Hōjō Yasutoki en mémoire de sa mère qui y est enterrée. Selon le Taiheiki, de sa fondation jusqu'à la fin du shogunat Kamakura, chaque shikken (régent) y est enterré. (fr) Tōshō-ji (東勝寺) was the Hōjō clan's family temple (bodaiji) in Kamakura during the Kamakura period. Its founder was Taikō Gyōyū and it was constructed in 1237 by Hōjō Yasutoki in memory of his mother, who had her tomb there. According to the Taiheiki, from its foundation until the end of the Kamakura shogunate every regent (shikken) was buried there. The temple no longer exists, since it was set on fire by the Hōjō themselves when the entire family committed suicide after Nitta Yoshisada's invasion of Kamakura on July 4, 1333. Its ruins were found in the Kasaigayatsu valley in today's Ōmachi. Tōshō-ji very probably used to occupy the entire valley. Standing at the top of a narrow valley shut off at its base by the Nameri river's deep gorge and by steep hills on the other three sides, and besides offering a clear view of the only road that crossed the river, it was a fortress surely valuable to the family also from the military point of view. At the site is a plaque that reads: National Historic Sites - The remains of Toshoji as designated on July 31, 1998 Toshoji is a Buddhist temple founded in the first half of the 13th Century by Yasutoki Hojo, the third vice-shogun of the Kamakura shogunate. In 1333, when Yoshisada Nitta and his troops attacked Kamakura, Takatoki Hōjō, all members of his clan, and his followers shut themselves up in this temple, set it on fire, and there, met their death. The temple was restored soon after this incident, and in the Muromachi Era (1392-1467) it came to rank third among the ten most renowned temples in the Kanto area. However, it was said to have been later abandoned in the Sengoku Era (1467-1573). The site is extremely important from an historical viewpoint as the remains of the main temple of the Hojo dynasty, and as the final resting place of the Kamakura Shogunate. By a series of excavations conducted in 1976, 1996, and 1997, part of the remains of the temple has been confirmed. Board of Education, Kamakura City, March 2000 Excavations in situ have revealed the basic structure of the temple, shards of Chinese pottery, and roof tiles bearing the Hōjō family crest. Stones and other surfaces singed by fire were also found, confirming the presence of a fire. About a hundred meters uphill after the temple, inside the forest lies the Hōjō Takatoki Harakiri Yagura, the cave where, according to tradition, the last of the Hōjō regents disemboweled himself. There are however other locations in Kamakura that make the same claim. The black stele in front of Takatoki's yagura reads:. In May 1333, when Nitta Yoshisada invaded Kamakura, Regent Hōjō Takatoki left his residence in Komachi and barricaded himself in Tōshō-ji, the family temple where all his ancestors were buried. After that, while watching from afar the lights and smoke of the fires consuming the shops and residences of the entire city of Kamakura that his family had ruled for 150 years, he and his whole family, composed of over 870 people, committed suicide. This tragic act that ended the Hojo's power forever took place here.Erected in March 1918 by the Kamakuracho Seinendan Ashikaga Takauji, the first of the Ashikaga shōguns, was ordered by Emperor Go-Daigo to transfer the temple and the Hōjō's remains to a new location, renaming it Hōkai-ji. Because the neighborhood was said to be still haunted by the ghosts of the Hōjō, a shrine called Tokusō Gongen was erected within the new temple to placate them. The shrine still exists and can be seen to the right of Hōkai-ji's main hall. On the Shakadōgayatsu side of the Shakadō Pass, just before the first houses, a small street to the left takes to a large group of yagura called Shakadōgayatsu Yagura-gun. There rest the bones of some of the Hōjō who killed themselves at Tōshō-ji that day. Their identity has been confirmed by the presence of a gorintō dated exactly eight days after the invasion, eight days being the time required by Buddhism before a funeral can be performed. (en) 東勝寺(とうしょうじ)は、かつて神奈川県鎌倉市葛西ケ谷にあった寺院で、鎌倉幕府の執権として活躍した北条氏の菩提寺のひとつ。関東十刹の一つであった。 (ja) |
dbo:thumbnail | wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Tosho-ji-Hojo_Family_temple_site.jpg?width=300 |
dbo:wikiPageID | 17208453 (xsd:integer) |
dbo:wikiPageLength | 7337 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger) |
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID | 1030398206 (xsd:integer) |
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink | dbc:Buddhist_archaeological_sites_in_Japan dbr:Rinzai dbc:Buddhist_temples_in_Kamakura,_Kanagawa dbr:Nitta_Yoshisada dbr:Shikken dbr:Taiheiki dbr:Muromachi_Period dbr:Bodaiji dbc:History_of_Kanagawa_Prefecture dbr:Glossary_of_Japanese_Buddhism dbr:Gongen dbr:Gorintō dbr:Kamakura_period dbr:Ashikaga_Takauji dbr:Kamakura_shogunate dbr:Yagura_(tombs) dbr:Hōjō_Takatoki dbr:Hōjō_Yasutoki dbr:Hōjō_clan dbr:Hōkai-ji_(Kamakura) dbr:Ōmachi_(Kanagawa) dbr:Kamakura,_Kanagawa dbr:Go-Daigo dbr:Sengoku_Era dbr:Historic_Sites_of_Japan dbr:Namerigawa dbr:File:Hojo_Takatoki_Harakiri-Yagura.jpg |
dbp:caption | The site in Kamakura where Tōshō-ji once stood (en) |
dbp:country | Japan (en) |
dbp:foundedBy | Hōjō Yasutoki, Taikō Gyōyū (en) |
dbp:functionalStatus | Closed as of 1333 (en) |
dbp:name | Seiryūzan Tōshō-ji (en) |
dbp:religiousAffiliation | dbr:Rinzai |
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate | dbt:Cite_book dbt:Coord dbt:Nihongo dbt:Reflist dbt:Short_description dbt:Infobox_religious_building |
dbp:yearCompleted | 1237 (xsd:integer) |
dct:subject | dbc:Buddhist_archaeological_sites_in_Japan dbc:Buddhist_temples_in_Kamakura,_Kanagawa dbc:History_of_Kanagawa_Prefecture |
gold:hypernym | dbr:Temple |
georss:point | 35.320433333333334 139.55914722222224 |
rdf:type | owl:Thing wikidata:Q41176 wikidata:Q1370598 yago:WikicatBuddhistTemplesInKamakura,Kanagawa geo:SpatialThing dbo:ArchitecturalStructure yago:Artifact100021939 yago:Building102913152 yago:Object100002684 yago:PhysicalEntity100001930 yago:PlaceOfWorship103953416 yago:YagoGeoEntity yago:YagoPermanentlyLocatedEntity dbo:Building dbo:HistoricBuilding dbo:ReligiousBuilding yago:Structure104341686 yago:Temple104407435 yago:Whole100003553 |
rdfs:comment | Le Tōshō-ji (東勝寺) était le temple familial (bodaiji) du clan Hōjō à Kamakura durant l'époque de Kamakura. Fondé par Taikō Gyōyū, il est construit en 1237 par Hōjō Yasutoki en mémoire de sa mère qui y est enterrée. Selon le Taiheiki, de sa fondation jusqu'à la fin du shogunat Kamakura, chaque shikken (régent) y est enterré. (fr) 東勝寺(とうしょうじ)は、かつて神奈川県鎌倉市葛西ケ谷にあった寺院で、鎌倉幕府の執権として活躍した北条氏の菩提寺のひとつ。関東十刹の一つであった。 (ja) Tōshō-ji (東勝寺) was the Hōjō clan's family temple (bodaiji) in Kamakura during the Kamakura period. Its founder was Taikō Gyōyū and it was constructed in 1237 by Hōjō Yasutoki in memory of his mother, who had her tomb there. According to the Taiheiki, from its foundation until the end of the Kamakura shogunate every regent (shikken) was buried there. The temple no longer exists, since it was set on fire by the Hōjō themselves when the entire family committed suicide after Nitta Yoshisada's invasion of Kamakura on July 4, 1333. Its ruins were found in the Kasaigayatsu valley in today's Ōmachi. Tōshō-ji very probably used to occupy the entire valley. Standing at the top of a narrow valley shut off at its base by the Nameri river's deep gorge and by steep hills on the other three sides, and be (en) |
rdfs:label | Tōshō-ji (fr) 東勝寺 (鎌倉市) (ja) Tōshō-ji (en) |
owl:sameAs | freebase:Tōshō-ji wikidata:Tōshō-ji dbpedia-fr:Tōshō-ji dbpedia-ja:Tōshō-ji dbpedia-th:Tōshō-ji https://global.dbpedia.org/id/3GYgY |
geo:geometry | POINT(139.55914306641 35.320434570312) |
geo:lat | 35.320435 (xsd:float) |
geo:long | 139.559143 (xsd:float) |
prov:wasDerivedFrom | wikipedia-en:Tōshō-ji?oldid=1030398206&ns=0 |
foaf:depiction | wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Hojo_Takatoki_Harakiri-Yagura.jpg wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Tosho-ji-Hojo_Family_temple_site.jpg |
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf | wikipedia-en:Tōshō-ji |
is dbo:wikiPageRedirects of | dbr:Tosho-ji dbr:Toshoji |
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of | dbr:Prince_Moriyoshi dbr:List_of_Historic_Sites_of_Japan_(Kanagawa) dbr:Emperor_Go-Daigo dbr:Tosho-ji dbr:Toshoji dbr:Bodaiji dbr:Siege_of_Kamakura_(1333) dbr:Kamakura's_proposed_World_Heritage_Sites dbr:Tetsujyo_Deguchi dbr:Kamakura dbr:Kamakura_shogunate dbr:Yagura_(tombs) dbr:Hōjō_Sadayuki dbr:Hōkai-ji dbr:Five_Mountain_System dbr:Nameri_River_(Kanagawa) |
is foaf:primaryTopic of | wikipedia-en:Tōshō-ji |