Word heritage in Kyoto(6) ---Enryaku-ji temple ---

The Enryaku-ji temple is one of the popular world heritage in Shiga prefecture,neighbor of Kyoto.

This temple is famous for burned out by the famous Military commander Oda Nobunaga.f:id:japan-tradition-culture:20170818093831j:plain

Enryaku-ji  is a Tendai monastery located on Mount Hiei in Ōtsu, overlooking Kyoto. It was founded during the early Heian period. The temple complex was established by Saichō (767–822), also known as Dengyō Daishi, who introduced the Tendai sect of Mahayana Buddhism to Japan from China. Enryaku-ji is the headquarters of the Tendai sect and one of the most significant monasteries in Japanese history. As such, it is part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site "Historic Monuments of Ancient Kyoto (Kyoto, Uji and Otsu Cities)". The founders of Jōdo-shūSōtō Zen, and Nichiren Buddhism all spent time at the monastery. Enryaku-ji is also the home of the "marathon monks."

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With the support of Emperor Kanmu, the Buddhist monk Saichō ordained a hundred disciples in 807.
Maintaining a strict discipline on Mt. Hiei, his monks lived in seclusion for twelve years of study and meditation.
After this period, the best students were retained in positions in the monastery and others graduated into positions in the government.
At the peak of its power, Enryaku-ji was a huge complex of as many as 3,000 sub-temples and a powerful army of warrior monks .
In the tenth century, succession disputes broke out between Tendai monks of the line of Ennin and Enchin.
These disputes resulted in opposing Tendai centers at Enryaku-ji and at Mii-dera, known respectively as the Mountain Order and the Temple Order .
Warrior monks were used to settle the disputes, and Tendai leaders began to hire mercenary armies who threatened rivals and even marched on the capital
to enforce monastic demands.
As part of a program to remove all potential rivals and unite the country, warlord Oda Nobunaga ended this Buddhist militancy in 1571 by attacking Enryaku-ji,
leveling the buildings and slaughtering monks.
Enryaku-ji's current structures date from the late 16th century through the first half of the 17th century, when the temple was reconstructed following a change
of government. Only one minor building survived, the Ruri-dō (Lapis Lazuli Hall), which is located down a long, unmarked path from the Sai-tō complex;
it is marked on maps, however. During reconstruction, some buildings were transferred from other temples, notably Mii-dera, and thus the buildings themselves are old,
though they have not always been at this location.
Today, most of Enryaku-ji's buildings are clustered in three areas: Tō-dō "East Pagoda", Sai-tō "West Pagoda", and Yokokawa.
The monastery's most important buildings are concentrated in Tō-dō. Sai-tō is a 20-minute walk away, primarily downhill from Tō-dō, and also features several
important buildings. Yokokawa is more isolated and less visited, about a 1:30 walk, and is most easily reached by bus,
which connects the three complexes and other locations on the mountain.

 

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