Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Bodaiji> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 68 of
68
with 100 triples per page.
- Bodaiji abstract "A bodaiji (菩提寺, lit. "bodhi temple") in Japanese Buddhism is a temple which, generation after generation, takes care of a family's dead, giving them burial and performing ceremonies in their soul's favor. The name is derived from the term bodai (菩提), which originally meant just Buddhist enlightenment (satori), but which in Japan has also come to mean either the care of one's dead to ensure their welfare after death or happiness in the beyond itself. Several samurai families including the Tokugawa had their bodaiji built to order, while others followed the example of commoners and simply adopted an existing temple as family temple. Families may have more than one bodaiji. The Tokugawa clan, for example, had two, while the Ashikaga clan had several, both in the Kantō and in the Kansai.".
- Bodaiji thumbnail TokugawaIemochi_grave.JPG?width=300.
- Bodaiji wikiPageID "22532156".
- Bodaiji wikiPageLength "2068".
- Bodaiji wikiPageOutDegree "38".
- Bodaiji wikiPageRevisionID "599697207".
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Ashikaga_Takauji.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Ashikaga_clan.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Bodhi.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Category:Buddhism_in_Japan.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Category:Cemeteries_in_Japan.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Category:Japanese_religions_terms.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Chōju-ji_(Kamakura).
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Edo_period.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Hōjō_clan.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Hōkai-ji_(Kamakura).
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Kamakura.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Kamakura,_Kanagawa.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Kamakura_period.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Kanei-ji.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Kansai.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Kansai_region.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Kantō.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Kantō_kubō.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Kantō_region.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Kyoto.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Kōjien.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Kōmyō-ji_(Kamakura).
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Muromachi_period.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Naitō_clan.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Satori.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Tokugawa_clan.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Tokyo.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Tōji-in.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Tōshō-ji.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Zuisen-ji.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink Zōjō-ji.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLink File:TokugawaIemochi_grave.JPG.
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLinkText "Bodai Temple".
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLinkText "Bodaiji".
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLinkText "Family Temple".
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLinkText "bodaiji".
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLinkText "family temple".
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLinkText "funeral temple".
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLinkText "funerary temple".
- Bodaiji wikiPageWikiLinkText "funerary temples".
- Bodaiji hasPhotoCollection Bodaiji.
- Bodaiji wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Commons_category.
- Bodaiji wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Nihongo.
- Bodaiji subject Category:Buddhism_in_Japan.
- Bodaiji subject Category:Cemeteries_in_Japan.
- Bodaiji subject Category:Japanese_religions_terms.
- Bodaiji hypernym Temple.
- Bodaiji type Article.
- Bodaiji type HistoricBuilding.
- Bodaiji type Article.
- Bodaiji type Attraction.
- Bodaiji comment "A bodaiji (菩提寺, lit. "bodhi temple") in Japanese Buddhism is a temple which, generation after generation, takes care of a family's dead, giving them burial and performing ceremonies in their soul's favor. The name is derived from the term bodai (菩提), which originally meant just Buddhist enlightenment (satori), but which in Japan has also come to mean either the care of one's dead to ensure their welfare after death or happiness in the beyond itself.".
- Bodaiji label "Bodaiji".
- Bodaiji sameAs Bodaiji.
- Bodaiji sameAs 菩提寺.
- Bodaiji sameAs m.05zmmn8.
- Bodaiji sameAs Q1084697.
- Bodaiji sameAs Q1084697.
- Bodaiji sameAs 菩提寺_(日本).
- Bodaiji wasDerivedFrom Bodaiji?oldid=599697207.
- Bodaiji depiction TokugawaIemochi_grave.JPG.
- Bodaiji isPrimaryTopicOf Bodaiji.