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  2. Butsudan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butsudan

    An ornate butsudan with open doors displaying an enshrined Amida Buddha. A Butsudan in the Jodo Shinshu Buddhism tradition. Close-up view of the inner altar with the painted scroll of the Buddha. A Butsudan (仏壇, lit. "Buddhist altar"), sometimes spelled Butudan, is a shrine commonly found in temples and homes in Japanese Buddhist cultures. [1]

  3. Kamidana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kamidana

    They are most commonly found in Japan, the home of kami worship. [ 1 ] The kamidana is typically placed high on a wall and contains a wide variety of items related to Shinto-style ceremonies, the most prominent of which is the shintai , an object meant to house a chosen kami , thus giving it a physical form to allow worship.

  4. Home altar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Home_altar

    A home altar or family altar is a shrine kept in the home of ... Family altars are also used to promote the ... Butsudan – analogous concept in Japanese Buddhism;

  5. Honzon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honzon

    Honzon (本尊, "fundamental honored [one]"), sometimes referred to as a Gohonzon (ご本尊 or 御本尊), is the enshrined main image [1] or principal deity [2] in Japanese Buddhism. The buddha , bodhisattva , or mandala image is located in either a temple or a household butsudan .

  6. Taiseki-ji - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taiseki-ji

    On the high altar, the Shumidan, of the Hōandō is a Buddhist Stupa containing the ashes of Nichiren Daishonin (left), a grand Butsudan housing the Dai Gohonzon (center), and another stupa containing a statue of Nichiren Daishonin carved by Izumi Ajari Nippō Shōnin from the same camphorwood leftover plank that the Dai Gohonzon was inscribed ...

  7. Main Hall (Japanese Buddhism) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Hall_(Japanese_Buddhism)

    Main hall or Main Temple is the building within a Japanese Buddhist monastery compound which enshrines the main object of veneration. [1] Because the various denominations deliberately use different terms, this single English term translates several Japanese words, among them butsuden, butsu-dō, kondō, konpon-chūdō, and hondō.

  8. Japanese funeral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_funeral

    Most Japanese homes maintain Buddhist altars, or butsudan (仏壇), for use in Buddhist ceremonies; and many also have Shinto shrines, or kamidana (神棚). When a death occurs, the shrine is closed and covered with white paper to keep out the impure spirits of the dead, a custom called kamidana-fūji (神棚封じ).

  9. Tanaka-Iga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tanaka-Iga

    Tanaka-Iga Butsugu (田中伊雅仏具) is a Japanese company that produces Buddhist goods, including butsudan shrines that are placed in many traditional Japanese homes. It is one of the oldest companies on Earth, being founded in the ninth century [1] and operating continuously since. [2]

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