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1,515 bytes added ,  19:17, 20 January 2014
Created page with "right|thumb|320px|The main gate to the temple. *''Founded: 860, Ennin'' *''Japanese'': 清浄華院 ''(shoujouke-in)'' Shôjôke-in is a [[Jodo..."
[[File:Shojokein.jpg|right|thumb|320px|The main gate to the temple.]]
*''Founded: [[860]], [[Ennin]]''
*''Japanese'': 清浄華院 ''(shoujouke-in)''

Shôjôke-in is a [[Jodo-shu|Jôdô-shû]] Buddhist temple located on Teramachi-dôri in [[Kyoto]].

It was founded by [[Ennin]] in [[860]] on the orders of [[Emperor Seiwa]], to serve as a Buddhist hall for the palace grounds. Construction was completed by [[864]]. Originally a training temple within the palace grounds, the name (roughly, "pure pure flower temple") derives from the idea of aspiring to sit on the Buddha's lotus pedestal.

The temple originally belonged to the [[Tendai]] sect, but [[Emperor Go-Shirakawa]] asked [[Honen|Hônen]] to take over and convert the temple to Jôdo-shû (Pure Land Buddhism). After being moved numerous times, the temple came to its current site in [[1590]].

The Main Hall contains images of Hônen, and Emperors Seiwa and [[Emperor Murakami|Murakami]], along with plaques or markers listing many other emperors. Figures buried in the temple's cemetery include a number of figures related to the Imperial Family, as well as Tateri Munetsugu, Yamashina Tokitsugu, Anekôji Kintomo, and a number of other famous writers.

The temple also holds an [[Important Cultural Property]] known as "Naki Fudô Engi" (Origin of Crying [[Fudo|Fudô]]), and the gravestone of [[Chima no kata]], great-grandmother of the famous [[Atsuhime]].

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==References==
*Plaques on-site.

[[Category:Temples]]
[[Category:Heian Period]]
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