法隆寺
Horyu-ji is the head temple of the Shotoku sect, located in Ikaruga Town, Ikoma District, Nara Prefecture. Tradition holds that it was founded by Prince Shotoku and Empress Suiko in the 15th year of Empress Suiko's reign (607 CE), and it preserves the world's oldest surviving wooden architecture. Registered in 1993 as one of Japan's first World Cultural Heritage sites (alongside Himeji Castle), it stands as one of the original UNESCO World Heritage entries. The Sai-in complex's Kondo and five-story pagoda survive from the late 7th to early 8th century — nearly 1,300 years — and are recognized by UNESCO as the world's oldest extant wooden buildings. With the To-in complex's Yumedono (Hall of Dreams, built 739), 38 of about 100 buildings designated as National Treasures, and roughly 4,600 designated cultural assets, Horyu-ji is the supreme repository of Japanese Buddhist art.
亮點與特色
- Kondo (Main Hall) — built in the 7th century, the world's oldest wooden building, enshrining the Shaka Triad (a National Treasure); admire the entasis columns
- Five-Story Pagoda — 31.5 m tall, the world's oldest pagoda; the proportional balance from the first to fifth tiers is exquisite
- Yumedono (Hall of Dreams) and To-in Precinct — built in 739 as an octagonal hall, with the secret Guze Kannon, said to be a life-sized image of Prince Shotoku
- Chumon (Central Gate) — the main gate to the Sai-in Precinct, with entasis columns and two Niou (Vajra Warrior) guardians
- Kudara Kannon (National Treasure) — enshrined in the Daihozoin, a 2.1 m wooden Asuka-period image with a uniquely elongated form

