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Hōkyō-ji
・ Hōkyōintō
・ Hōkō Shimamura
・ Hōkō-ji
・ Hōkō-ji (Kyoto)
・ Hōkō-ji (Shizuoka)
・ Hōmashō Noriyuki
・ Hōmei Iwano
・ Hōmongi
・ Hōmura Uta
・ Hōmyō dōji
・ Hōnanchō Station
・ Hōnaunau, Hawaii
・ Hōnen
・ Hōnen Matsuri


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Hōkyō-ji : ウィキペディア英語版
Hōkyō-ji
Hōkyō-ji is a Sōtō Zen Buddhist temple founded about 1278 in Echizen, Fukui prefecture, Japan.〔Bodiford, pp. 36, 66.〕
==History and founding==
Jakuen left Eihei-ji in 1261. He meditated in solitary with the wild animals at the base of Mount Ginnanpo, about away. By one account, a leader of the Fujiwara clan in charge of the Ono District, Ijira Tomotoshi happened to find him during a hunt, and offered his financial support. In 1278, Tomotoshi's son Tomanari built a temple for Jakuen who apparently wished to revere Ju-ching by taking the name from the Hōkyō era in China, a period during which Ju-ching was Dogen's teacher.〔Bodiford, p. 66.〕
Giun, who was Jakuen's student and eventual Dharma heir, joined Hōkyō-ji in 1279, where he succeeded Jakuen as the abbot in 1299 for 15 years. Later Giun went to Eihei-ji for 18 years.〔
Keizan joined in 1282, when he became ''ino''. Studying with Jakuen, Keizan experienced enlightenment at Hōkyō-ji in 1285.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Hōkyō-ji」の詳細全文を読む



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