Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Jingū-ji> ?p ?o }
- Jingū-ji abstract "Until the Meiji period (1868–1912), the Japanese jingū-ji (神宮寺, shrine temple) were places of worship composed of a Buddhist temple and of a shrine dedicated to a local kami. These complexes were born when a temple was erected next to a shrine to help its kami with its karmic problems. At the time, kami were thought to be also subjected to karma, and therefore in need of a salvation only Buddhism could provide. Having first appeared during the Nara period (710 - 794), jingū-ji remained common for over a millennium until, with few exceptions, they were destroyed in compliance with the Kami and Buddhas Separation Act of 1868. Seiganto-ji is a Tendai temple part of the Kumano Sanzan Shinto shrine complex, and as such can be considered one of the few shrine-temples still extant.".
- Jingū-ji thumbnail Tsurugaoka_Hachimangū-ji.jpg?width=300.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageID "32622098".
- Jingū-ji wikiPageLength "13593".
- Jingū-ji wikiPageOutDegree "72".
- Jingū-ji wikiPageRevisionID "645338063".
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Bodhisattva.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Buddhahood.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Buddhism.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Buddhism_in_Japan.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Buddhist_temples_in_Japan.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Category:Buddhist_temples_in_Japan.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Category:Japanese_architecture.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Category:Japanese_religions_terms.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Category:Shinbutsu_shūgō.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Category:Shinto_shrines_in_Japan.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Daian-ji.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Danka_system.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Dharma.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Dō_(architecture).
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Emperor_Ōjin.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Enryaku-ji.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Fujiwara_clan.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Gokoku-ji.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Hachiman.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Haibutsu_kishaku.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Hie_Shrine.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Honzon.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Ibaraki_Prefecture.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Ibaraki_prefecture.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Ise_Grand_Shrine.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Ise_Shrine.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Iwashimizu_Hachiman-gū.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Iwashimizu_Hachimangū.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Jufuku-ji.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Kamakura.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Kamakura,_Kanagawa.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Kami.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Kanjō.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Karma.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Karma_in_Buddhism.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Kasuga-taisha.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Kasuga_Shrine.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Kitano_Tenman-gū.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Kitano_Tenmangū.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Kumano_Sanzan.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Kumano_shrine.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Kōfuku-ji.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Kūkai.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Main_Hall_(Japanese_Buddhism).
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Meiji_period.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Mon_(architecture).
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Nara,_Nara.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Nara_period.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Nio.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Niō.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Pagoda.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Satori.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Seiganto-ji.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Shichidō_garan.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Shinbutsu-shūgō.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Shinbutsu_bunri.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Shinbutsu_shūgō.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Shinto.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Shinto_shrine.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Sumiyoshi_Taisha.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Sumiyoshi_taisha.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Sutra.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Sūtra.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Tendai.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Tsurugaoka_Hachiman-gū.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Tsurugaoka_Hachimangū.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Tōdai-ji.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Usa_Hachiman-gū.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Usa_Jingū.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink Yasaka_Shrine.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink File:Seigantoji05s1920.jpg.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink File:Tsurugaoka_Hachimangū-ji.jpg.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLink File:Turu_daitoz.jpg.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLinkText "Jingū-ji".
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLinkText "attached".
- Jingū-ji wikiPageWikiLinkText "jingū-ji".
- Jingū-ji hasPhotoCollection Jingū-ji.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Buddhist_temples_in_Japan.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Commons_category.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Main.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Nihongo.
- Jingū-ji wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Shinto_shrine.
- Jingū-ji subject Category:Buddhist_temples_in_Japan.
- Jingū-ji subject Category:Japanese_architecture.
- Jingū-ji subject Category:Japanese_religions_terms.
- Jingū-ji subject Category:Shinbutsu_shūgō.
- Jingū-ji subject Category:Shinto_shrines_in_Japan.
- Jingū-ji comment "Until the Meiji period (1868–1912), the Japanese jingū-ji (神宮寺, shrine temple) were places of worship composed of a Buddhist temple and of a shrine dedicated to a local kami. These complexes were born when a temple was erected next to a shrine to help its kami with its karmic problems. At the time, kami were thought to be also subjected to karma, and therefore in need of a salvation only Buddhism could provide.".
- Jingū-ji label "Jingū-ji".
- Jingū-ji sameAs Jingū-ji.
- Jingū-ji sameAs 神宮寺.
- Jingū-ji sameAs m.0h1fdhp.
- Jingū-ji sameAs Q1074971.
- Jingū-ji sameAs Q1074971.