• ...village chapels (nominally Tendai or Shingon) into full-time temples, which in turn helped Sōji-ji's network grow.[8]. ... Sōjiji-soin (総持寺祖院) in Ishikawa Prefecture.
  • Sojiji is an internationally opened temple for Zen practice located in the suburban area of Yokohama city, close to Tokyo bay.
  • A Guide to Sojiji Temple on the Noto from www.fun-japan.jpWeb a temple alive with real zen monastic practice eiheiji, the temple of eternal peace, is one of the…
  • Keizan Zenji was head of the temple Morookaji,in modern Ishikawa Prefecture. In 1321, he renamed the temple the Shogaku-zan Sojiji.
  • Sōji-ji (總持寺) is one of two daihonzan (大本山, “head temples”) of the Sōtō school of Zen Buddhism. The other is Eihei-ji temple in Fukui Prefecture.
  • Sojiji Temple, or Sojiji Soin Father Temple, is a historically important Zen temple located on the Noto Peninsula, in Ishikawa Prefecture.
  • Soji-ji Temple Niomon, Ibaraki: 4 yorum, makale ve 5 resme bakın.
  • Located on the Noto Peninsula, Sojiji Temple (總持寺, Sōjiji) was once one of the most important temples of Zen Buddhism in all of Japan until its fortunes declined.
  • The sprawling and beautiful Soji-ji Temple in Yokohama is one of the two biggest Zen temples of the Soto sect in Japan.
  • Soji-ji: 22nd temple on the Saigoku Kannon pilgrimage in Western Japan. With photos.
  • Based on more than fifteen years of fieldwork, interviews, and archival research, Sōjiji: Discipline, Compassion, and Enlightenment at a Japanese Zen Temple...
  • Sōji-ji is a Shingon Buddhist temple in Nagahama. It stands in an area with a number of other temples. However, its front gate is distinctive for its obvious age.
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