Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Chūgū ji

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Phone
  
+81 745-75-2106

Chūgū-ji

Address
  
Japan, 〒636-0111 奈良県生駒郡斑鳩町法隆寺北1丁目1−2

Similar
  
Hōryū‑ji, Hokki‑ji, Hōrin‑ji, Kōryū‑ji, Hōryūji Station

horyu ji temple nara ikaruga


Chūgū-ji (中宮寺) is a temple in Nara Prefecture, Japan, that was founded as a nunnery in the seventh century by Shōtoku Taishi. Located immediately to the northeast of Hōryū-ji, its statue of Miroku and Tenjukoku mandala are National Treasures.

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History

Chūgūji was once the palace of Hashihito, mother of Shōtoku Taishi. After her death it was converted into a temple. Originally standing three hundred metres to the east, it was moved to its present location in the Muromachi period. Chūgū-ji is one of three nunneries in Yamato whose chief priestesses were imperial princesses. The site of Chūgū-ji has been designated a Historic Site, and the Edo period Omotegomon has been registered as a cultural property.

Miroku Bosatsu

The camphor wood statue of Miroku (菩薩半跏像) is a National Treasure dating from the Asuka period. Formerly painted, it is finished in lacquer.

Tenjukoku Shūchō Mandala

After the death of Shōtoku Taishi in 622, his consort Tachibana-no-Oiratsume commissioned the Tenjukoku Shūchō Mandala (天寿国繍帳). The embroidery of heaven and eternal life, together with one hundred tortoises and accompanying text, was restored in the Edo period by combining the surviving fragments with parts of a Kamakura period replica.

References

Chūgū-ji Wikipedia