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Horyu-ji temple was first erected in the 7th century and has come down to us today in the magnificent form it achieved in 711, over 1,300 years ago. It has given lie to the common misconception that wood is destined to quickly rot and decay, and has demonstrated the enduring value of wood, not to mention the fact that the temple has been designated a World Heritage Site as the earth's oldest wooden structure. Here Tsunekazu Nishioka, the master carpenter who undertook the repair of this monumental structure in the mid 20th century, shares the insights and knowledge he gained from that experience. To make Nishioka's words and observations more easily understood by later generations, Jiro Kohara has buttressed them with scientific experiments and commentary, bringing into sharp view Hory-ji's long-concealed mysteries and secrets. The result is a revealing picture of Japan's immemorial love of trees and wood, a broad-ranging introduction to the country's wood culture.
J1810.46 --- J6561 --- Japan: Religion -- Buddhism -- temples and monastries, pilgrimage -- Nara prefecture (Yamato) --- Japan: Art and antiquities -- architecture -- religious buildings --- Japan: Religion -- Buddhism -- temples and monasteries, pilgrimage -- Nara prefecture (Yamato) --- Building, Wooden --- Wood. --- Architecture, Japanese. --- Hōryūji (Ikaruga-chō, Nara-ken, Japan) --- Construction en bois --- Architecture japonaise
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Featuring the renowned seventh-century gilt-bronze kyamuni (Shaka) triad at the H ry ji, Constructing the Dharma King reveals how the impression of a Buddhist image evolved in Yamato, Japan, from the indistinct sense of divine otherness at the early stage of the transmission to more concrete ideals and values concerning families, authority, and kingship. According to the accompanying inscription, the Kashiwade, a low-ranking bureaucratic clan, commissioned the triad to commemorate the deaths of its family members. Considering the triad as an endpoint of a dynamic political re-envisioning spearheaded by Soga no Umako (d. 626) and the members of the Yamato sovereignty, Akiko Walley argues that the Kashiwade constructed the Shaka triad not simply as a private act of devotion, but a pivotal political act that demonstrated their allegiance and loyalty. This publication contends that the appearance of the Shaka triad was chosen to echo the new vision of a Dharma King that was manifested in Prince Umayato as the political persona orchestrated by Umako, and in the preceding Shaka triad statue at Asukadera produced by Umako and his closest allies. In the course of discussion, this book also reexamines the key points of debate surrounding this statue, including the reliability of the accompanying inscription, identity of its makers, and the statue s ties to the sculptural trends on the Asian continent.
J1800.10 --- J1830 --- J1883 --- J1810.46 --- J1895 --- J6400 --- Japan: Religion -- Buddhism -- history -- Kodai, prehistoric and ancient, premodern --- Japan: Religion -- Buddhism -- deities --- Japan: Religion -- Buddhism -- other schools and sects --- Japan: Religion -- Buddhism -- temples and monastries, pilgrimage -- Nara prefecture (Yamato) --- Japan: Religion -- Buddhism -- art --- Japan: Art and antiquities -- sculpture --- Japan --- Buddhist sculpture --- Buddhism and politics --- Buddhist art and symbolism --- Shōtoku Taishi, --- Hōryūji (Ikaruga-chō, Nara-ken, Japan) --- Japan: Religion -- Buddhism -- temples and monasteries, pilgrimage -- Nara prefecture (Yamato) --- Shōtoku Taishi, - 574?-622?
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J1810.46 --- J1895 --- J6561 --- J6000 --- Japan: Religion -- Buddhism -- temples and monastries, pilgrimage -- Nara prefecture (Yamato) --- Japan: Religion -- Buddhism -- art --- Japan: Art and antiquities -- architecture -- religious buildings --- Japan: Art and antiquities --- Buddhist temples --- Temples --- Architecture --- Church architecture --- Religious institutions --- Temples, Buddhist --- Temples, Lamaist --- Buddhist pilgrims and pilgrimages --- Japan: Religion -- Buddhism -- temples and monasetries, pilgrimage -- Nara prefecture (Yamato) --- Japan: Religion -- Buddhism -- temples and monasteries, pilgrimage -- Nara prefecture (Yamato) --- Religious architecture
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Buddhist temples --- Hōryūji (Ikaruga-chō, Nara-ken, Japan). --- J1800.10 --- J1810.46 --- J1895 --- J6561 --- Japan: Religion -- Buddhism -- history -- Kodai, prehistoric and ancient, premodern --- Japan: Religion -- Buddhism -- temples and monasteries, pilgrimage -- Nara prefecture (Yamato) --- Japan: Religion -- Buddhism -- art --- Japan: Art and antiquities -- architecture -- religious buildings --- Hōryūji (Ikaruga-chō, Nara-ken, Japan) --- Ikaruga-chō (Nara-ken, Japan). --- Hōryū Gakumonji (Ikaruga-chō, Nara-ken, Japan) --- 斑鳩寺 --- 法隆寺 --- 法隆寺 (斑鳩町奈良県, Japan) --- 法隆寺 (Ikaruga-chō, Nara-ken, Japan) --- 法隆寺Hōryūji (Ikaruga-chō, Nara-ken, Japan)
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