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*''Japanese'': 寛永寺 ''(Kan'ei-ji)''
 
*''Japanese'': 寛永寺 ''(Kan'ei-ji)''
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Kan'ei-ji is a [[Tendai]] Buddhist temple located in [[Ueno Park]]; along with [[Zojo-ji|Zôjô-ji]], it was one of two [[Tokugawa clan]] family temples in the Tokugawa shogunal capital of [[Edo]]. Five [[Tokugawa shogunate|Tokugawa shoguns]] were buried on the temple grounds; six more are buried at Zôjô-ji.
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Kan'ei-ji is a [[Tendai]] Buddhist temple located in [[Ueno Park]]; along with [[Zojo-ji|Zôjô-ji]], it was one of two [[Tokugawa clan]] family temples in the Tokugawa shogunal capital of [[Edo]]. Six [[Tokugawa shogunate|Tokugawa shoguns]] were buried on the temple grounds; six more are buried at Zôjô-ji.
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The temple was originally built in [[1625]] to help defend the shogunal capital of [[Edo]] from the unlucky northeastern direction. It was called Tôei-zan ("East-''ei-zan''") in reference to it being an eastern counterpart to [[Mt. Hiei]] (''Hiei-zan''), which guards [[Kyoto]] in the same manner.<ref name=maehira69>Maehira Fusaaki, "''Edo bakufu to Ryûkyû shisetsu - Tôshôgû sankei wo chûshin ni''" 江戸幕府と琉球使節~東照宮参詣を中心に, in ''Ryûkyû shisetsu, Edo he iku!'', Okinawa Prefectural Museum (2009), 69.</ref> The construction and establishment of Kan'ei-ji was overseen by [[Shogun]] [[Tokugawa Iemitsu]]; it was founded by the monk [[Tenkai]]<!--天海-->, and served as the center of the Tendai sect for the [[Kanto region|Kantô region]]. Along with [[Rinno-ji|Rinnô-ji]] in [[Nikko|Nikkô]] and [[Enryaku-ji]] on Mt. Hiei, it became one of the chief three Tendai temples in the archipelago, securing, through its connections with the shogunate, the power of Tendai within Japan's religious hierarchies. The shogun typically visited the temple and paid respects to his ancestors on the 10th or 20th day of the new year each year, as well as on other occasions.<ref>Hirai Kiyoshi, ''Edo-jô to Shôgun no kurashi'', Gakken (2000), 32.</ref>
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The temple was originally built in [[1625]] to help defend the shogunal capital of [[Edo]] from the unlucky northeastern direction. It was called Tôei-zan ("East-''ei-zan''") in reference to it being an eastern counterpart to [[Mt. Hiei]] (''Hiei-zan''), which guards [[Kyoto]] in the same manner.<ref name=maehira69>Maehira Fusaaki, "''Edo bakufu to Ryûkyû shisetsu - Tôshôgû sankei wo chûshin ni''" 江戸幕府と琉球使節~東照宮参詣を中心に, in ''Ryûkyû shisetsu, Edo he iku!'', Okinawa Prefectural Museum (2009), 69.</ref> Not only this, but a [[Benten]] hall was constructed on a manmade island in Shinobazu Pond in emulation of the Benten Shrine on [[Chikubushima]] in [[Lake Biwa]], and a [[Kiyomizu Kannon-do|Kiyomizu Kannon Hall]] was constructed in emulation of Kyoto's [[Kiyomizu-dera]].
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The construction and establishment of Kan'ei-ji was overseen by [[Shogun]] [[Tokugawa Iemitsu]]; it was founded by the monk [[Tenkai]]<!--天海-->, and served as the center of the Tendai sect for the [[Kanto region|Kantô region]]. Along with [[Rinno-ji|Rinnô-ji]] in [[Nikko|Nikkô]] and [[Enryaku-ji]] on Mt. Hiei, it became one of the chief three Tendai temples in the archipelago, securing, through its connections with the shogunate, the power of Tendai within Japan's religious hierarchies. The shogun typically visited the temple and paid respects to his ancestors on the 10th or 20th day of the new year each year, as well as on other occasions.<ref>Hirai Kiyoshi, ''Edo-jô to Shôgun no kurashi'', Gakken (2000), 32.</ref>
    
[[Prince Morizumi]] (Shuchô hosshinnô<!--守澄法親王-->), a son of [[Emperor Go-Mizunoo]], served as the first head priest (''[[zasu]]''<!--座主-->) of the temple, a position which continued to be occupied by members of the Imperial family down through the generations. These ''[[monzeki]]'' (priests of [[kuge|aristocratic]] or Imperial lineage) associated with Kan'ei-ji came to be called Rinnôji-no-miya.<ref name=maehira69/>
 
[[Prince Morizumi]] (Shuchô hosshinnô<!--守澄法親王-->), a son of [[Emperor Go-Mizunoo]], served as the first head priest (''[[zasu]]''<!--座主-->) of the temple, a position which continued to be occupied by members of the Imperial family down through the generations. These ''[[monzeki]]'' (priests of [[kuge|aristocratic]] or Imperial lineage) associated with Kan'ei-ji came to be called Rinnôji-no-miya.<ref name=maehira69/>
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The grounds of the temple extended over a large area, much of which is today Ueno Park, centering on the Konponchû-dô, commissioned by Shogun [[Tokugawa Tsunayoshi]] in [[1698]]/9. This hall, which enshrined a statue of [[Yakushi]] as its principal image of worship, was flanked by stands of bamboo transplanted from [[Enryaku-ji]]. The spot, now occupied by the park's famous fountain, was known as Take-no-utena ("Bamboo Pedestal"), as a result.
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The grounds of the temple extended over a large area, much of which is today Ueno Park. At its height in the Tenpô era (1830-1844), the temple covered some 300,000 ''[[Japanese Measurements|tsubo]]'', centering on the Konponchû-dô, commissioned by Shogun [[Tokugawa Tsunayoshi]] in [[1698]]/9. This hall, which enshrined a statue of [[Yakushi]] as its principal image of worship, was flanked by stands of bamboo transplanted from Enryaku-ji. The spot, now occupied by the park's famous fountain, was known as Take-no-utena ("Bamboo Pedestal"), as a result.
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During the [[battle of Ueno]] in [[1868]], as the shogunate fell, a group of pro-shogunate loyalists known as the [[Shogitai|Shôgitai]] and closely associated with the temple holed up there; Kan'ei-ji was accordingly attacked, and many of its buildings destroyed. Many of those killed that day are formally buried at the temple. In the aftermath of this battle, the [[Meiji government]] reduced the temple to one-tenth its previous size, such that it only covered about 30,000 ''tsubo''.
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During the [[battle of Ueno]] in [[1868]], as the shogunate fell, a group of pro-shogunate loyalists known as the [[Shogitai|Shôgitai]] holed up in the temple, which was accordingly attacked, and many of its buildings destroyed. Many of those killed that day are formally buried at the temple.
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The temple suffered extensive damage and was all but destroyed completely in the Allied bombings of Tokyo in 1945. Several buildings on the grounds survive, or were rebuilt, but the temple grounds, which once covered the full area of what is today Ueno Park, have been shrunk considerably. Shoguns [[Tokugawa Ietsuna]], [[Tokugawa Tsunayoshi|Tsunayoshi]], [[Tokugawa Yoshimune|Yoshimune]], [[Tokugawa Ieharu|Ieharu]], [[Tokugawa Ienari|Ienari]], and [[Tokugawa Iesada|Iesada]] were buried within the grounds. Each of the shogunal tombs originally had six gates leading up to them, as a mark of the shoguns' prestige, though for financial reasons some of these tombs shared gates rather than having a new six gates constructed and maintained. Each of the shoguns is reportedly buried in an upright seated position, facing straight towards [[Edo castle]].<ref name=tour>Tour of Kan'ei-ji Tokugawa graves, August 2017.</ref>
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The temple suffered extensive damage and was all but destroyed completely in the Allied bombings of Tokyo in 1945. Several buildings on the grounds survive, or were rebuilt, but the temple grounds, which once covered the full area of what is today Ueno Park, have been shrunk considerably. The tombs of three shoguns ([[Tokugawa Ieharu]], [[Tokugawa Ienari|Ienari]], and [[Tokugawa Iesada|Iesada]]) survive, but those of [[Tokugawa Ietsuna]] and [[Tokugawa Tsunayoshi]] were destroyed.
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While most of the graves of wives of the shoguns are located in smaller sites located deeper (''oku'') in the compound, [[Atsuhime]] was buried in a tomb of similar style and size to that of her husband Iesada, immediately adjacent to his. [[Tokugawa Iesato]], first post-[[Edo period]] head of the Tokugawa clan, is also buried at Kan'eiji, alongside his wife, [[Tokugawa Hiroko]], and son [[Tokugawa Iemasa]]; these three graves are located between those of shoguns Tsunayoshi and Iesada.<ref name=tour/>
    
Many of the buildings and structures surviving at Kan'ei-ji today are designated [[Important Cultural Properties]].
 
Many of the buildings and structures surviving at Kan'ei-ji today are designated [[Important Cultural Properties]].
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