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| [[Image:SogenjiIshimon.JPG|right|thumb|300px|The stone gates of Sôgenji.]] | | [[Image:SogenjiIshimon.JPG|right|thumb|300px|The stone gates of Sôgenji.]] |
| + | *''Other Names'': 霊徳山 ''(Reitoku-zan)'' |
| *''Japanese'': 崇元寺 ''(Sougen-ji)'' | | *''Japanese'': 崇元寺 ''(Sougen-ji)'' |
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− | Sôgen-ji was a Buddhist temple in [[Tomari]], [[Okinawa Prefecture|Okinawa]], originally constructed in the early half of the reign of King [[Sho Shin|Shô Shin]] (r. 1477-1526). All that survives of the temple today are its thick, heavy stone gates, which were originally constructed during an expansion of the temple in [[1496]]. | + | Sôgen-ji was a [[Rinzai]] [[Zen]] temple in [[Tomari]], [[Okinawa Prefecture|Okinawa]], originally constructed during the reign of King [[Sho Shin|Shô Shin]] (r. 1477-1526). All that survives of the temple today are its thick, heavy stone gates, which were originally constructed during an expansion of the temple in [[1496]]. |
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− | At that same time in [[1496]], stelae were erected in honor of all the kings of [[Ryukyu Kingdom|Ryûkyû]]. In [[1527]], a pair of stelae were erected at the gates declaring that all who enter, even the reigning king himself, were expected to dismount before passing through the gates. | + | At that same time in [[1496]], stelae were erected in honor of all the kings of [[Ryukyu Kingdom|Ryûkyû]], making the temple both a shrine to each of the kings of the past, and also a shrine to the kingdom itself. In [[1527]], a pair of stelae were erected at the gates declaring that all who enter, even the reigning king himself, were expected to dismount before passing through the gates. |
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− | {{stub}}
| + | The temple was a branch temple of [[Engaku-ji (Okinawa)|Engaku-ji]], the chief Rinzai temple in the [[Ryukyu Kingdom|kingdom]], which was located just outside the grounds of [[Shuri castle]]. The grounds of Sôgenji covered more than 1230 ''[[tsubo]]'', following a layout with a Chinese flavor, but surrounded by a distinctively Ryukyuan stone wall. When [[Chinese investiture envoys]] came to the kingdom, before visiting the castle, they would take part in a ceremony here at Sôgenji in honor of the previous kings. The main buildings of the complex were arranged in a square around an open plaza; entering via the gates to the south and proceeding north, one would first encounter the ''zendô'', or "front hall." Passing through it, one comes to the central plaza, flanked by a West Building (西庁) and East Building (東庁), and with the main shrine (正廟) straight ahead to the north. It was within this building that all the kings of Ryûkyû, from [[Shunten]] to [[Sho Tai|Shô Tai]], were enshrined, more in the manner of a Chinese Confucian or Daoist temple than that of a Buddhist temple. The ''kuri'' (monks' quarters) was located just east of the main shrine building, north of the East Building. |
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| + | Many of the temple's buildings were declared [[National Treasures]] in 1933, but were then destroyed in the 1945 Battle of Okinawa, leaving only sections of the stone walls/gates intact. |
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| ==References== | | ==References== |
| *Kerr, George. ''Okinawa: The History of an Island People''. Revised Edition. Tuttle Publishing, 2000. pp109ff. | | *Kerr, George. ''Okinawa: The History of an Island People''. Revised Edition. Tuttle Publishing, 2000. pp109ff. |
| + | *"Sôgenji" 崇元寺. ''Okinawa hyakka daijiten'' (Okinawa Encyclopedia). vol. 2. Okinawa Times, 1983. pp610-611. |
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| [[Category:Ryukyu]] | | [[Category:Ryukyu]] |
| [[Category:Temples]] | | [[Category:Temples]] |