Nijūmon

<i>Nijūmon</i>

Nijūmon

Type of gate in a Shinto shrine


Nijūmon (二重門, lit. two-story gate) is one of two types of two-story gate presently used in Japan (the other one being the rōmon, see photo in the gallery below), and can be found at most Japanese Buddhist temples.[1] This gate is distinguishable from its relative by the roof above the first floor which skirts the entire upper story, absent in a rōmon.[2] Accordingly, it has a series of brackets (tokyō) supporting the roof's eaves both at the first and at the second story.[3] In a rōmon, the brackets support a balcony. The tokyō are usually three-stepped (mitesaki) with tail rafters at the third step.[4][3] A nijūmon is normally covered by a hip-and-gable roof.[2]

Nijūmon (the sanmon of Tōfuku-ji, a National Treasure)

Unlike a rōmon, whose second story is inaccessible and unusable, a nijūmon has stairs leading to the second story. Some gates have at their ends two sanrō (山廊), 2 x 1 bay structures housing the stairs.[2] The second story of a nijūmon usually contains statues of Shakyamuni or of goddess Kannon, and of the 16 Rakan, and hosts periodical religious ceremonies.[5] Large nijūmon' are 5 bays wide, 2 bays deep and have three entrances, however Tokyo's Zōjō-ji, the Tokugawa clan's funerary temple, has a gate which is 5 x 3 bays.[2] Smaller ones are 3 x 2 bays and have one, two or even three entrances.[2]

Of all temple gate types, the nujūmon has the highest status, and is accordingly used for important gates like the chūmon (middle gate) of ancient temples as Hōryū-ji.[3] The sanmon, the gate of a Zen temple of highest prestige, is usually a nijūmon.[note 1] Some nijūmon are called chūmon (中門, lit. middle gate) because they are situated between the entrance and the temple.[2]

The second story of a nijūmon

Some interior images of the second story of a nijūmon, in this case Kōmyō-ji's sanmon in Kamakura, Kanagawa prefecture.

See also

Notes

  1. The term sanmon originated at Zen temples, but is often used by other sects too, particularly by the Jōdo sect.

References

  1. Fujita & Koga 2008, pp. 84–85
  2. "nijuumon". JAANUS – Japanese Architecture and Art Net User System. Retrieved 2010-06-22.
  3. Hamashima, Masashi (1999). Jisha Kenchiku no Kanshō Kiso Chishiki (in Japanese). Tokyo: Shibundō. pp. 105–107.
  4. For details, see the article Tokyō.
  5. Iwanami Nihonshi Jiten

Bibliography


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