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*''Japanese'': 孤篷庵 ''(Kohouan)''
 
*''Japanese'': 孤篷庵 ''(Kohouan)''
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Kohôan is a sub-temple (''[[tatchu|tatchû]]'') of [[Daitokuji]], established in [[1612]] by [[Kobori Enshu|Kobori Enshû]] and moved to its current location and incorporated into Daitokuji in [[1643]]. It was the last, i.e. latest, sub-temple to be incorporated into the temple.
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Kohôan is a sub-temple (''[[tatchu|tatchû]]'') of [[Daitokuji]], established in [[1612]] by [[Kobori Enshu|Kobori Enshû]] and moved to its current location and incorporated into Daitokuji in [[1643]]. It was the last, i.e. latest, sub-temple to be incorporated into the temple complex of Daitokuji.
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Originally established within the grounds of [[Ryukoin|Ryûkô-in]], it was later moved to its current location, a few blocks west of the core of Daitokuji. The characters used to write the temple's name, Kohôan, roughly translate as "solitary reed mat hermitage," but the reed mat refers to those which would have been placed on the deck of a ship; the name is supposed to recall the idea of a solitary boat on the ocean. The temple is known for its tearoom, known as Bôsen, and tea garden, which are likewise designed to evoke the idea of looking out over the ocean from the deck of a small ship. The Bôsen tearoom and ''shoin'' (study) in the main hall are nationally designated [[Important Cultural Properties]].
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Originally established within the grounds of [[Ryukoin|Ryûkô-in]], it was later moved to its current location, a few blocks west of the core of Daitokuji, and received its main hall (''hondô'') from the temple of [[Unrinin|Unrin-in]], which went defunct around that time. The characters used to write the temple's name, Kohôan, roughly translate as "solitary reed mat hermitage," but the reed mat refers to those which would have been placed on the deck of a ship; the name is supposed to recall the idea of a solitary boat on the ocean. The temple is known for its tearoom, known as Bôsen, and tea garden, which are likewise designed to evoke the idea of looking out over the ocean from the deck of a small ship. The Bôsen tearoom and ''shoin'' (study) in the main hall are nationally designated [[Important Cultural Properties]].
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''[[Fusuma]]'' paintings in the main hall include a [[Three Friends of Winter|pine, bamboo, and plum]] set by [[Kano Tanshin|Kanô Tanshin]], eldest son of [[Kano Tanyu|Kanô Tan'yû]].
    
The temple burned down in [[1793]], but was rebuilt by [[Matsudaira Fumai]].
 
The temple burned down in [[1793]], but was rebuilt by [[Matsudaira Fumai]].
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