Ōno-ji

Buddhist temple in Nara Prefecture, Japan


title: "Ōno-ji" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["buddhist-temples-in-nara-prefecture", "uda,-nara", "historic-sites-of-japan", "yamato-province", "en-no-gyōja", "shingon-temples"] description: "Buddhist temple in Nara Prefecture, Japan" topic_path: "society/religion" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ōno-ji" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Buddhist temple in Nara Prefecture, Japan ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox religious building"]

FieldValue
nameŌno-ji
native_name大野寺
imageOnodera magaibutsu.jpg
image_size300
captionŌno-ji magaibutsu
map_typeJapan Nara Prefecture#Japan
relief1
map_captionŌno-dera
locationUda, Nara
coordinates
religious_affiliationBuddhist
riteShingon
countryJapan
founded_byc.En no Gyōja
year_completedc.681
footnotes
::

| name = Ōno-ji | native_name = 大野寺 | image = Onodera magaibutsu.jpg | image_size = 300 | alt = | caption = Ōno-ji magaibutsu | map_type = Japan Nara Prefecture#Japan | relief = 1 | map_alt = | map_caption =Ōno-dera | location = Uda, Nara | coordinates = | religious_affiliation = Buddhist | rite = Shingon | deity = | country = Japan | functional_status = | website = | founded_by = c.En no Gyōja | year_completed = c.681 | footnotes =

Ōno-ji, also known as Ōno-dera is a Buddhist temple located in the Murō-Ōno neighborhood of the city of Uda, Nara. It belongs to the Murōji-branch of Shingon Buddhism and its honzon is a statue of Miroku Bosatsu. The temple is located at the western entry to Muro-ji and is known for its rock-carved image of Miroku Bosatsu carved into a natural face on the bank of the Uda River, which was designated a National Historic Site in 1934.

Overview

The origins of the temple are uncertain. According to the temple's legend, it was first established by the semi-legendary founder of Shugendō, En no Gyōja, in 681. In 824, Kūkai reconstructed the temple, and renamed it Jison-in Miroku-ji. The nearby temple of Murō-ji was originally a Hosso sect temple founded and developed by monks from Kofuku-ji, and since monks from Kofuku-ji were also involved in the carving of its rock-carved Buddhist statues, it believed is that Ōno-ji was closely related to Kofuku-ji.

The temple was completely destroyed by fire in 1900 in which all of its ancient records were destroyed. At that time, the honzon image and other Buddha statues were saved from the fire, but the current buildings were all modern reconstructions. The temple is located a five-minute walk from Murōguchi-Ōno Station on the Kintetsu Railway Osaka Line.

Ōno-ji Stone Buddha

The term magaibutsu (磨崖仏) refers to a Buddhist figure carved directly into a natural rock faces or cliffside. The Miroku Bosatsu image at Ōno-ji is a magaibutsu carved into a large rock wall about 30 meters high on the opposite bank of the Uda River. The rock wall was carved into a halo shape over a height of 13.8 meters, and the inside was smoothed and carved into a 11.5 m bas-relief image. Work began in 1207 at the request of the monk Gaen of Kofuku-ji, and the eye-opening ceremony was held in 1209 in the presence of cloistered Emperor Go-Toba. The creator is thought to be a stonemason who came to Japan from Song China. It is modeled after a large stone statue of Miroku Bosatsu (of which only the halo remains today) that was located on Mount Kasagi in Yamashiro Province. The statue was surveyed in 1916 by archaeologists, who discovered that the image had a hole in its chest, sealed by a stone lid eight-cm in diameter and three-cm thick. A small scroll was found inside, but the characters were illegible. There was also a hole in the abdomen around the navel, and a scroll was found inside, but it was so badly decomposed that it was illegible. To the lower left of the main image is a 2.2 m circle carved into an outline of a mandala, with Vairocana in the center and Siddhaṃ script characters representing various Buddhas carved into the periphery, which is thought to date to the same period as the main image.

The statue was endangered by groundwater seeping out of the bedrock, so conservation and repair work was carried out from 1993 to 1999. Work included removing moss from the surface and changing the flow path of the groundwater.

National Important Cultural Properties

file:Onodera, sanmon.jpg|Gate of the temple file:Onodera, keidai.jpg|Precincts file:Cerasus spachiana at Ono-dera 01.jpg|Weeping sakura

Bibliography

References

References

  1. link. Cultural Heritage Online. Agency for Cultural Affairs
  2. (2012). "(国指定史跡事典) National Historic Site Encyclopedia". 学生社.
  3. "大谷磨崖仏 - とちぎふるさと学習".

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

buddhist-temples-in-nara-prefectureuda,-narahistoric-sites-of-japanyamato-provinceen-no-gyōjashingon-temples