Hokkedō

E540507

Hokkedō is one of the oldest surviving halls at the Tōdai-ji temple complex in Nara, Japan, renowned for its historic Buddhist statues and early Nara-period architecture.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Hokkedō canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Buddhist temple hall
cultural heritage site
historic building
architecturalStyle Nara-period architecture
associatedWith Great Buddha of Nara NERFINISHED
Tōdai-ji NERFINISHED
belongsToTradition Japanese temple architecture
city Nara City NERFINISHED
conservationStatus preserved historic structure
contains historic Buddhist statues
principal image of Fukūkenjaku Kannon
statues of the Four Heavenly Kings
statues of the Twelve Heavenly Generals
country Japan
culturalContext Japanese Buddhism
culturalRegion Kansai region NERFINISHED
dedicatedTo Buddha NERFINISHED
Lotus Sutra NERFINISHED
denomination Kegon Buddhism NERFINISHED
era Nara period NERFINISHED
function lecture hall for Lotus Sutra
hasAlternativeName Sangatsudō NERFINISHED
hasArtisticStyle Nara-period Buddhist sculpture
hasFeature multi-bay hall layout
raised wooden platform
veranda surrounding the hall
hasJapaneseAlias 三月堂 NERFINISHED
hasJapaneseName 法華堂 NERFINISHED
heritageDesignationBy Government of Japan NERFINISHED
heritageStatus Important Cultural Property of Japan NERFINISHED
locatedIn Japan
Nara NERFINISHED
Nara Prefecture NERFINISHED
Tōdai-ji NERFINISHED
mainDeity Fukūkenjaku Kannon NERFINISHED
material wood
near Great Buddha Hall of Tōdai-ji NERFINISHED
openToPublic yes
partOf Tōdai-ji temple complex NERFINISHED
religion Buddhism
roofType tiled roof
significance important example of early Nara-period architecture
one of the oldest surviving halls at Tōdai-ji
touristAttraction yes
usedFor Buddhist ceremonies
religious worship
ritual recitation of the Lotus Sutra

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Tōdai-ji hasPart Hokkedō