Linji Huguo Chan Temple
Linji Huguo Chan Temple (Chinese: 臨濟護國禪寺; pinyin: Línjí Hùguó Chán Sì) is a Buddhist temple located in Zhongshan District of Taipei, Taiwan.[1]
History
In 1900, then Japanese Governor of Taiwan Kodama Gentaro (兒玉源太郎) requested monks from the Rinzai school of Zen Buddhism (in Japan) to come to Taiwan, build a temple and promote Zen Buddhism in Taiwan on land nearby the newly constructed Taiwan Grand (Shinto) Shrine (台灣神社).[2]
It was called Rinzai Gokokuzen-ji (臨済護国禅寺), which was a branch temple of Rinzai Zen Buddhism in Japanese rule period. Construction of the temple, designed by Japanese monk Umeyama Genshū (梅山玄秀), commenced in 1900 and was completed in 1911. The statue of Sakyamuni was consecrated on June 21, 1912.[3]
In April 2007, the Taipei Municipal Government has allocated NT$18.05 million for the reconstruction project.
Temple Buildings & Architecture
The extant buildings include the Shanmen, Four Heavenly Kings Hall, Mahavira Hall, Lotus Treasury Hall, bell tower, drum tower and a pagoda.
Amitabha Hall
Mahavira Hall
The Mahavira Hall was built with double-eaves gable and hip roofs. It modeled the architectural style of the Song dynasty. On each of the main ridge is a tile named "Onigawara". The Mahavira Hall houses statues of Sakyamuni (center), Guanyin (right) and Ksitigarbha (left).
Lotus Treasury Hall
References
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- Bangka Lungshan Temple
- Bangka Qingshui Temple
- Beipu Citian Temple
- Chung Tai Chan Monastery
- Dharma Drum Mountain
- Fengshan Longshan Temple
- Fo Guang Shan Monastery
- Hong Fa Temple
- Hushan Temple
- Kaihua Temple
- Kaiyuan Temple
- Linji Huguo Chan Temple
- Lukang Longshan Temple
- Penghu Guanyin Temple
- Shandao Temple
- Songzhu Temple
- Xiangde Temple
- Xuanzang Temple
- Zi Yun Yan
External links
- Sutra Recitation in the Mahavira Hall of Linji Huguo Temple (30 sec. video hosted on YouTube)
- The Inside of Mahavira Hall and View of Non-duality Dharma Gate (不二法門) of Linji Huguo Temple (short video hosted on YouTube)
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