Horenji Sanmon_1
Last Updated:May16, 2022

The wooden gate of Horenji Temple is thought to be the oldest extant structure in the municipality of Shirakawa. It originally stood in front of the priests’ residence (kuri) at Shorenji Temple in the village of Nakano, in southern Shirakawa. A sanctuary of the Jodo Shinshu (True Pure Land) school of Buddhism, Shorenji was established in the late 1400s and was long considered the most important temple in the area; its head priests were descended from Kanenbo Zenshun, the figure believed to have introduced Jodo Shinshu to the Sho River valley in the thirteenth century. The main hall of Shorenji was built in 1504, and the gate of the priests’ residence is thought to date from the same period.

 

Shorenji and its historic structures were moved from Nakano during the construction of the Miboro Dam, which upon its completion in 1960 created Lake Miboro, flooding Nakano and the other villages upstream. The main hall was relocated to the city of Takayama, but the gate was moved to Horenji in the village of Hatogaya, since that is where Kanenbo Zenshun lived and practiced and where he is buried.

 

この英文解説は、2021年観光庁「地域観光資源の多言語解説整備支援事業」により整備しています。

This English description is provided by the "Multilingual Commentary Project 2021" of Japan Tourism Agency.

 

 

Description

Name Horenji Sanmon (Main gate of Horenji Temple)
Type Shirakawa Village Designated Important Cultural Property (Structure)
Date Designated on December 9, 1970
* Please note that the above information is provided for reference. There may be cases where it differs from current information.