Ōya-ji

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Ōya-dera
大谷寺
Utsunomiya Oya-ji Temple.JPG
Ōya-dera Kannon-do
Religion
Affiliation Buddhist
Deity Senjū Kannon Bosatsu ( Sahasrabhūja)
Rite Tendai
Statusfunctional
Location
Location1198 Ōya-machi, Utsunomiya-shi, Tochigi-ken
CountryJapan
Tochigi-ken geolocalisation relief.svg
Red pog.svg
Shown within Tochigi Prefecture
Japan natural location map with side map of the Ryukyu Islands.jpg
Red pog.svg
Ōya-ji (Japan)
Geographic coordinates 36°35′47″N139°49′15″E / 36.59639°N 139.82083°E / 36.59639; 139.82083
Architecture
Founder Kūkai
Completedc.810 AD
Website
Official website
Oya-ji}

Ōya-dera (大谷寺) is a Buddhist temple located in the city of Utsunomiya, Tochigi Prefecture, in northern Kantō region of Japan. The temple is famous for its bas-relief carvings on a cliff face. It belongs to the Tendai sect and its honzon is a statue of Senjū Kannon Bosatsu (Sahasrabhūja). The temple's full name is Tenkai-zan Jodo-in Ōya-ji (天開山 浄土院 大谷寺).The temple is the 19th stop on the Bandō Sanjūsankasho pilgrimage route. [1]

Contents

History

The history and foundation of the temple is uncertain, but it appears to date from the late Nara period to early Heian period. The temple is located in a valley which contains the ruins of a Jōmon period settlement. According to the temple's own legend, it was founded by Kūkai in 810 AD after he returned from Tang dynasty China. The honzon image of Senjū Kannon Bosatsu is approximately 4.5 meters tall and was completed before the end of the Heian period. The temple became part of the Bandō Sanjūsankasho route in the Kamakura period. It was under the protection of the powerful Utsunomiya Futaarayama Jinja and the Utsunomiya clan through the Muromachi period. The temple went into decline after the destruction of the Utsunomiya clan by Toyotomi Hideyoshi, but was revived under the sponsorship of the Okudaira clan, who became daimyō of Utsunomiya Domain in the early Edo period. The temple was rebuilt by Kamehime, the eldest daughter of Shōgun Tokugawa Ieyasu, with the assistance of Tenkai as a resting place between Edo and the Shrines and Temples of Nikkō. The temple has burned down on several occasions, and most of its documentary history has been lost. Its precincts were excavated in 1965, and Buddha statues from the Kamakura period, votive stones dated 1363, and a copper bowl dated 1551 were found.

The temple complex also includes a small museum. Across from the temple is an Ōya stone quarry that has been converted into a park. The park features a massive statue of Kannon, called the "Kannon of Peace" (平和観音, Heiwa Kannon) created after World War II.

The tempe is approximately 30 minutes by car from JR East Utsunomiya Station.

Cultural Properties

Special National Historic Site

The carvings are located on the wall of a large natural cave on the southwestern side of a hill made of Ōya stone called Otomeyama. The wall is divided into four large and small quadrants. In the first quadrant, facing west, is a statue of Senjū Kannon with a height of four meters. This is the honzon image of the temple. According to temple legend, the statue was carved by Kūkai himself, and was once covered by lacquer and gold leaf. In the second quadrant is a sitting image of Shaka Nyōrai with a height of 3.5 meters, flanked to the left and right by Monju Bosatsu and Fugen Bostasu. The statue in the third quadrant a sitting Yakushi Nyōrai with a height of 1.2 meters, flanked by Nikkō Bosatsu and Gakkō Bosatsu. The fourth quadrant is believed to be a seated Amida Nyōrai with a height of 2.6 meters, flanked by status of Kannon Bosatsu and Seishi Bosatsu. In addition, several sitting images depicted on the wall on the right side of the Kannon statue, and a statue of a Buddha above. The statues of Senjū Kannon and Yakushi Nyōrai are believed to date from the early Heian period, with the statue of Shaka Nyōrai from the late Heian period, and the remaining statues from the late Heian to early Kamakura period.

These statues are regarded as having extremely high artistic and academic value, along with the more famous Usuki Stone Buddhas in Oita Prefecture, and the carvings were also designated an Important Cultural Property of Japan in 1986.

Tochigi Prefecture Tangible Cultural Properties

Utsunomiya City Tangible Cultural Properties


See also

References

  1. Yuichi Kobayashi (2020). 坂東三十三ヶ所札所めぐり 観音霊場巡礼ルートガイド. Meitsu shuppan. ISBN   4780426049.
  2. "大谷磨崖仏" [Ōya magaibutsu] (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs . Retrieved 31 August 2020.
  3. "トチギの文化財" (in Japanese). Utsunomiya City. Retrieved 20 December 2023.
  4. "宇都宮の歴史と文化財" (in Japanese). Utsunomiya City. Retrieved 20 December 2023.
  5. "宇都宮の歴史と文化財" (in Japanese). Utsunomiya City. Retrieved 20 December 2023.