Niukanshōfu Shrine
#687 among destinations in Japan
Facts and practical information
Niukanshōfu Shrine or Niukanshōbu Shrine is a Shinto shrine in Ito district, Wakayama Prefecture, Japan. ()
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Niukanshōfu Shrine – popular in the area (distance from the attraction)
Nearby attractions include: Kongōbu-ji, Koyasan Reihōkan, Muryōkōin, Niutsuhime Shrine.
4.9 miSE , Temple, Sacred and religious sitesKongōbu-ji, Mount Koya
125 min walk • Nestled within the sacred Mount Koya in Wakayama, Japan, lies Kongōbu-ji, the head temple of the Shingon sect of Japanese Buddhism. Founded by Kobo Daishi, also known as Kukai, in 816, the temple has stood as a spiritual center for over a millennium.
- 4.9 miSESpecialty museum, Art museum, Museum
Koyasan Reihōkan, Mount Koya
125 min walk • Kōyasan Reihōkan is an art museum on Kōya-san, Wakayama Prefecture, Japan, preserving and displaying Buddhist art owned by temples on Kōya-san. The collection is centered around articles from the Heian and Kamakura periods and includes paintings, calligraphy, sutras, sculpture and Buddhist ritual objects.
- 4.9 miSETemple, Buddhist architecture
Muryōkōin, Mount Koya
126 min walk • Muryōkōin is a temple of Koyasan Shingon Buddhism, located on Mount Kōya, Wakayama prefecture, Japan. Its name means "Temple of limitless light" and is the Japanese transliteration of Amitābha.
~70 ftN Sacred and religious sites, , TempleNiutsuhime Shrine, Katsuragi
1 min walk • The Niutsuhime Shrine or Nibutsuhime Shrine is a Shinto shrine in located the town of Katsuragi, Ito district, Wakayama Prefecture, Japan. The shrine is one of three shrines claiming the title of ichinomiya of Kii Province.
2.7 miNE Complex on a Buddhist pilgrimage routeJison-in, Kudoyama
71 min walk • Jison-in is a Buddhist temple in the town of Kudoyama that marks the entrance to the pilgrimage route of Koyasan. It is part of the "Sacred Sites and Pilgrimage Routes in the Kii Mountain Range" UNESCO World Heritage Site.
- 5.2 miSETemple, Sacred and religious sites
Kongō Sanmai-in, Mount Koya
133 min walk • Kongō Sanmai-in is a minor temple complex on Mount Kōya in Japan, founded in 1211 by order of Hōjō Masako for posthumous soul of Minamoto no Yoritomo and renamed "Kongō Sanmai-in" in 1219 for that of Minamoto no Sanetomo.
- 5 miSEUniversities and schools, Buddhist architecture
Koyasan University, Mount Koya
129 min walk • Koyasan University is a private university in Mount Kōya, Wakayama Prefecture, Japan. The predecessor of the school was established in 1886 as a monastic school for Shingon Buddhist monks, and it was chartered as a university in 1926.
- 6.4 miNETemple
Ying qi si, Hashimoto
163 min walk • Ohki-ji Temple is a temple of the Koyasan Shingon sect located in Hashimoto, Hashimoto City, Wakayama Prefecture. The temple was founded by Oqi Mokushoku, a Buddhist priest who developed the area.
- 6.2 miNEMemorial
Dong jia du chang da chang ye deng long, Hashimoto
159 min walk • Toke Watariba Dai Jyoyadoro is a lantern located in Toke, Hashimoto City, Wakayama Prefecture. It is a large lantern used to mark the crossing of the Kino River and was designated as Hashimoto City's Cultural Property No. 26 on August 28, 1981.