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[[Image:PhoenixHall.jpg|right|thumb|250px|The Phoenix Hall at Byôdôin.]]
*''Founded: [[1052]]''
*''Japanese'': 平等院 ''(Byoudouin)''
The Byôdôin is a Buddhist temple in [[Uji]], near [[Kyoto]], devoted to [[Amida Buddha]], and famous for its Phoenix Hall (''Hôôdô''), the only major building in the complex which survives today.
The compound was originally a manor purchased by [[Fujiwara no Michinaga]] in [[998]]; his son [[Fujiwara no Yorimichi]] used it as a summer retreat for some time before converting it to a temple in 1052. The Phoenix Hall was built the following year.
The Phoenix Hall, constructed in the ''shinzen zukuri'' style of [[Heian period]] mansions, with its large and completely ornamental wings, is said to resemble a bird which has just alighted. Situated in front of a lotus pond and housing a statue of Amida, it is meant to recall Amida's Western Paradise. Patterned after palaces seen in paintings of the Western Paradise, the structure, is in reality only one story tall, and consists of only one interior room - that which holds the Amida image. However, it is made to appear to be two stories, with walkways on the second story extending all the way down the wings, and watchtower-like elements at the corners of the wings, where they turn and progress forwards towards the pond.
The Amida image itself was sculpted in the ''[[yosegi]]'' multiple-block method by [[Jocho|Jôchô]], who also produced many sculptures for the [[Hojoji|Hôjô-ji]] and other major temples founded around that time. A number of flying, dancing ''apsaras'', carved out of wood, circle the room, high on the walls, emulating again the environment or appearance of the Western Paradise.
The [[1180]] [[First Battle of Uji]], which opened the [[Genpei War]], took place in and around the Byôdôin, and on nearby [[Uji Bridge]]<ref>Sansom, George. ''A History of Japan to 1334''. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1958. p278.</ref>. A [[Minamoto clan]] force, led by [[Minamoto no Yorimasa]] and [[Prince Mochihito]], and accompanied by a number of [[sohei|warrior monks]] from [[Miidera]], were chased here by [[Taira clan]] samurai. The Minamoto were defeated, Yorimasa committing suicide inside the Phoenix Hall; according to some sources, this was the first recorded instance of a ''[[seppuku]]'' in the midst of military defeat.
The temple was attacked and destroyed in the 1330s, leaving only the Phoenix Hall, bell tower, and a few other small structures standing today.
The Byôdôin has been designated a World Heritage Site, along with many other sites under the collective designation "Historic Monuments of Ancient Kyoto (Kyoto, Uji and Otsu Cities)," and many of the sculptures and other objects associated with the temple have been designated National Treasures. A modern storehouse/museum on the site houses many of the older or more precious pieces, removed from the Phoenix Hall and maintained there for conservation purposes.
==References==
*Mason, Penelope. ''History of Japanese Art''. Second Edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2005. pp143-146.
[[Category:Temples]]
[[Category:Heian Period]]