
Gangô-ji Gokurakubo hondo

Gangô-ji Gokurakubo zenshitsu
Gangō-ji (元興寺) is an ancient
Buddhist temple, that
was once one of the powerful Nanto
Shichi Daiji, in Nara, Japan
.
History
The
original foundation of the temple was in Asuka
, by Soga no Umako. The temple was moved
to Nara in 718, following the capital relocation to Heijō-kyō
.
Gangō-ji initially held as much as seven halls and pagodas on its
complex ground, which occupied a wide area within what is now
Naramachi, the preserved district of
modern Nara city. Most of the original architecture were, however,
lost over time and notably in fires during the 15th and 19th
centuries (Muromachi and Edo period respectively).
Architecture

Gangô-ji east gate

Gangô-ji miniature pagoda
best preserved part of the temple is known as
Gangō-ji
Gokurakubō (元興寺極楽坊) and belongs to the Shingon-risshū
school.
This site is a part of a group of temples,
shrines and other places in Nara that UNESCO
has designated as World Heritage Site "Historic Monuments of Ancient
Nara", and holds three national treasures:
- the Hondō (本堂, the main hall), or the
Gokurakubō (極楽坊), which is one of the few well-preserved structure
of the temple,
- the Zen room
- the miniature (5.5 meters tall) five-story pagoda
Most of the destroyed complex ground has altered and melted itself
into parts of Naramachi over the course. Another small part of the
temple remains today as the other Gangō-ji, of a
Kegon school but with little remainders in terms of
architecture.
See also
Notes