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Shōfuku ji (Odawara)

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Affiliation
  
Tō-ji branch Shingon

Completed
  
753 (?)

Founder
  
Dōkyō

Country
  
Japan

Phone
  
+81 465-47-3413

Shōfuku-ji (Odawara)

Location
  
1167 Iizumi Odawara-shi, Kanagawa

Deity
  
Jūichimen Kannon (Eleven-Headed Kannon)

Address
  
1143 Iizumi, Odawara, Kanagawa Prefecture 250-0863, Japan

Similar
  
Shōkoku‑ji Temple, Ganden‑ji Temple, Iiyama Kannon, Sugimoto‑dera, An'yō‑in

Shōfuku-ji (勝福寺) is a Shingon sect Buddhist temple located in the northeastern portion of the city of Odawara, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. It is more popularly known as the Iizumi Kannon (飯泉観音), after its primary object of worship. Shōfuku-ji is the 5th temple in the Bandō Sanjūsankasho pilgrimage circuit of 33 Buddhist temples in the Kantō region of eastern Japan to the Bodhisattva Kannon.

History

According to temple legend, Shōfuku-ji was founded in the Nara period by the priest Dōkyō for the soul of the deceased Empress Kōken, and housed an image of Kannon brought to Japan by the famed Tang dynasty priest Guanjin, which had been owned by the Empress. However, no historical documents have survived to substantiate this legend, and the history of the temple is thus uncertain. The temple was relocated to its present location in 830 AD. Shōfuku-ji is mentioned in the Kamakura period story, Soga Monogatari, and enjoyed the patronage of the Go-Hōjō clan during the Sengoku period. The current Hondō dates from 1706, and is the oldest surviving structure of the temple, although the bronze bell is dated 1629.

At present, the temple belongs to the Tō-ji branch of the Shingon sect of Japanese Buddhism. Its honzon is a Juichimen Kannon Bosatsu .

References

Shōfuku-ji (Odawara) Wikipedia