Important Cultural Property

Hundred Kannon Hall

Edo Period (3rd year of Hōreki Era, 1753)

The Hundred Kannon Hall enshrines one hundred Kannon statues from the Saigoku, Chichibu, and Bando Kannon Pilgrimages.
The front features a pyramidal roof, and the rear has a hip-and-gable roof, both with sangawarabuki pantiles.
Due to its location on a steep site elevated by a three-tiered stone wall, the rear is built in the kake-zukuri (overhanging) method.
The floor plan includes an open facade, with a two-tiered altar arranged in a U-shape at the back, making the center a worship area.
The enshrined Kannon statues are small replicas modeled after the principal images of each of the hundred pilgrimage sites, including various unusual figures such as one depicted on a boat.
The hall is noted as a symbol of the increase in popularity of Kannon pilgrimages among the general populace from the mid-Edo period (1603–1868)​.

Important Cultural Property

Edo Period (3rd year of Hōreki Era, 1753)

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