[Noun] This is a general term for the editions published by major temples, mainly in Nara, such as Todaiji, Saidaiji, Toshodaiji, Horyuji, and Daianji, from the early Kamakura period, as well as the Kofukuji edition from the Heian period. Most of them are Buddhist scriptures, and they fell into decline during the Muromachi period. The name Kasuga edition for the Kofukuji edition is a new name coined by enthusiasts during the Meiji period. Source: The Selected Edition of the Japanese Language Dictionary About the Selected Edition of the Japanese Language Dictionary Information |
〘名〙 鎌倉時代の初期頃から、東大寺・西大寺・唐招提寺・法隆寺・大安寺など、奈良を中心とする諸大寺が出版した版本と、平安時代からの興福寺版をも総称していう。ほとんどが仏典で、室町時代には衰えてしまった。なお、興福寺版を春日版と呼ぶのは、明治時代にはいってから、好事家がいい出した新しい名称である。
出典 精選版 日本国語大辞典精選版 日本国語大辞典について 情報 |
A British law enacted in June 1701. The order of s...
Association for Computing Machinery (ASCM) is an A...
…[Mitsuo Chihara]. . . *Some of the terminology t...
Date of birth and death unknown. Italy's most...
Historically, the law of nations with global scale...
…In the late Middle Ages (1350-1500), both sacred...
... Content analysis has revealed that the Palati...
A marine earthworm in the phylum Annelida, class O...
This was the imperial palace of the retired Empero...
The sub-capital of the Oise department in norther...
〘Noun〙 (A variation of " kamukura" ) 1. ...
...It is said that the Ainu people used it as a d...
...These spectacles include Pepper's Ghost (f...
…The introduction of printing in the late 15th ce...
A Vaishnavite scripture compiled in the 10th centu...