Experiences, Events, and Spots
Enmeiji Temple's wooden standing statue of Shaka Nyorai unveiled
The wooden standing statue of Shaka Nyorai, which was designated a national treasure before the war and is now an important cultural property following the enactment of the Cultural Properties Protection Act, will be open to the public without prior reservations as part of the after-sales campaign.
Basic information
It was founded in the Heian period with a stone Buddha carved by Kobo Daishi as its principal image, and was revived in the Edo period by local monk Jogon, who was also a follower of the fifth Tokugawa shogun, Tsunayoshi. The Yubae Maple tree, said to be 1,000 years old, is a designated natural monument of Osaka Prefecture.
The "Seiryouji-style Shaka statue" (a Buddhist statue modeled after the standing statue of Shaka Nyorai enshrined at Seiryo-ji Temple in Saga, Kyoto), which is enshrined in the museum's Treasure Hall and is a nationally registered tangible cultural property, was created in the Kamakura period and is a former national treasure (now an important cultural property). It was originally the principal image of Sairin-ji Temple in Furuichi, Habikino City, which is said to have been built in the Asuka period (around the 6th century), but was moved to Enmei-ji Temple in 1872 (Meiji 5).
[Special Exhibition] Wooden standing statue of Shaka Nyorai
| Event period and date | April 17th (Friday), 18th (Saturday), May 5th (Tuesday/Holiday), 2026 |
|---|---|
| Business hours and holidays | 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM |
| Price | 200 yen (free entry within the grounds, free on May 5, 2026) |
| Contact Us | Enmeiji Temple 0721-62-2134 |
| Official website | https://kankou-kawachinagano.jp/spot/1359 |
| Address | 492 Kamigaoka, Kawachinagano City |
| Access |
From Nankai/Kintetsu Kawachinagano Station, take the Nankai bus to Kamigakaguchi, then walk for 12 minutes |
