Visiting at Tsurugaoka Hachimangu Temple in Kamakura জাপানের বৌদ্ধ মন্দির পরিদর্শন করছি।টোকিওজাপান











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The most significant Shinto temple in Kamakura, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan, is Tsurugaoka Hachimangū (鎴岡八幡宮). With two museums, the shrine is a hub of the city of Kamakura's culture and the site of many of its most significant festivals. • It functioned as a Hachiman shrine for the most of its existence and, in more recent times, as a Tendai Buddhist temple, a style distinctive of Japanese Buddhist architecture.Before the kami Hachiman was executed at Shichirigahama beach, it is said that the renowned Buddhist teacher Nichiren Daishonin once paid a visit to the shrine to chastise him. • Originally constructed as a branch of Iwashimizu Shrine in Zaimokuza, where little Moto Hachiman currently stands, this shrine was dedicated to the Emperor Ōjin, his mother Empress Jingu, and his wife Hime-gami. The Emperor Ōjin was deified and given the name Hachiman, tutelary god of soldiers. The Kamakura shogunate was established in 1191 by Minamoto no Yoritomo, who also requested Hachiman[note 1] to live there in order to defend his rule.[1] On November 14, 1280, the temple experienced a significant fire, during which a number of treasures from the inner sanctum were also taken. • Visiting at Tsurugaoka Hachimangu Temple in Kamakura. জাপানের বৌদ্ধ মন্দির পরিদর্শন করছি।টোকিও,জাপান • Although Tsurugaoka Hachimangū is presently only a Shinto shrine, it was also one of Kamakura's oldest Buddhist temples for about 700 years from the time of its founding until the Shinto and Buddhism Separation Order (神仏判然令) of 1868. During that time, the temple was known as Tsurugaoka Hachimangū-ji (鎴岡八幡宮寺).[3] For centuries, the coexistence of Buddhism and kami worship was commonplace at shrine-temple complexes like Tsurugaoka, known as jingū-ji. However, the Meiji government wanted to modify this for political reasons.[4] (The honji suijaku idea holds that the Japanese kami, and Hachiman in particular, were merely regional embodiments of the universal buddha. This was one of the first and most widely recognized syncretic deities. For instance, in Usa, Kyūshū, Hachiman was worshipped with Miroku Bosatsu (Maitreya) as early as the 7th century. • • Hello friends, • I'm Bipul Dutta. I am from Tokyo, Japan. I like to exploring new places. I want to see everything. I want to explore every corner in the world. I make entertainment video for all. So watch the video and please do Subscribe my channel. • My Facebook Profile:   / bipul.dutta.50   • Facebook Page:   / bloggerbipul1   • YouTube Channel: Dutta Moshai • Instagrgam: bipul.dutta2 • Twitter ID: bipuldutta2 • #dutta moshai • #duttamoshai

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