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2017 Fiscal Year Final Research Report

The historical research on the Kakuozan Nissen-ji Temple in the Meiji and Taisho period

Research Project

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Project/Area Number 15K12934
Research Category

Grant-in-Aid for Challenging Exploratory Research

Allocation TypeMulti-year Fund
Research Field Japanese history
Research InstitutionOsaka University

Principal Investigator

SANO Masafumi  大阪大学, 日本語日本文化教育センター, 准教授 (10403205)

Project Period (FY) 2015-04-01 – 2018-03-31
Keywords日暹寺(日泰寺) / 都市史 / 国際交流史
Outline of Final Research Achievements

In 1898, William Peppe discovered remains of the Buddha in British India. The following year, in 1899, the British government and its chartered administration in India gifted them to the royal family of Thailand. The Buddhist community in Japan received a part of them in 1900. The Kakuozan Nissen-ji Temple was constructed to enshrine them in 1904 in Tsukimizaka, Tashiro village, Aichi District (present-day Hoo-cho, Chikusa Ward, Nagoya City)(The name of the temple was altered to Nittai-ji in 1942). Later, in 1918, the Enshrinement Tower was constructed at Nissen-ji and this became the prescribed final shrine for the remains of the Buddha. Although Nissen-ji / Nittai-ji has come to be positioned as one of the main centers of Japanese-Thai cultural exchange, researchers, so far, have not adequately focused on its history. In this research, we review the history of Nissen-ji in the Meiji and Taisho period, analyzing regional and religious newspapers and sects’ institutional journals.

Free Research Field

日本近現代史

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Published: 2019-03-29  

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