GINKAKU-JI - SILVER PAVILION
Ginkaku-ji - Silver Pavilion Kyoto Japan. The Silver Pavilion is one of the highlights of any visit to Kyoto. Ginkaku-ji - Silver Pavilion was built in the style of the Golden Pavilion.
Ginkaku-ji (銀閣寺, Ginkaku-ji), the 'Temple of the Silver Pavilion,' is a Buddhist Japanese Temple in the Higashiyama District of Kyoto, Japan. The temple's official name is Jishō-ji (慈照寺). It was built in 1474 by the shogun Ashikaga Yoshimasa, who sought to emulate the Golden Pavilion Kinkakuji Temple commissioned by his grandfather Ashikaga Yoshimitsu.
Ginkakuji Temple - Silver Pavilion
Ginkaku-ji is part of the
The Philosopher's Walk in
Eastern
Kyoto.
The Kannon hall is the main building at the temple. It is
popularly known as Ginkaku, the Silver Pavilion. The intention was to cover
it in silver, but due to the increasing severity of the Onin War, which
broke out several years earlier in 1467, construction was halted, and the
silver covering never placed on the pavilion. The building, originally
intended to be a monument to ostentation, is now taken as an example of
Japanese refinement and restraint.
Like Kinkaku-ji, Ginkaku-ji was
originally built to serve as a place of rest and solitude for the Shogun.
During his reign as Shogun, Ashikaga Yoshimasa inspired a new outpouring of
traditional culture, which came to be known as Higashiyama Bunka, the
Culture of the Eastern Mountain. Having retired to the villa, it is said
Yoshimasa sat in the pavilion, contemplating the calm and beauty of the
gardens as the Onin War worsened and Kyoto was
burned to the ground. In 1485, Yoshimasa became a Zen Buddhist monk, and
after his death the villa became a Buddhist temple, renamed Jishō-ji.
Of all the temple buildings once standing, only the Silver Pavilion remains.
In addition to that building, the temple features wooded grounds covered
with a variety of mosses, and a Japanese garden, supposedly designed by the
great landscape artist Soami. The rock and sand garden of Ginkaku-ji is
particularly famous, and a pile of sand said to symbolize
Mount Fuji has now come to be a part of the
garden.
Ginkakuji Temple Pictures
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(Article based on Wikipedia article and used under the GNU Free Documentation License)

