Yamada-dera

Site of Yamada-dera in Sakurai

Yamada-dera (山田寺) was a Buddhist temple established in the Asuka period in Sakurai, Nara Prefecture, Japan. The area has been designated a Special Historic Site and forms part of a grouping of sites submitted in 2007 for future inscription on the UNESCO World Heritage List: Asuka-Fujiwara: Archaeological sites of Japan’s Ancient Capitals and Related Properties.[1][2][3] Excavations in the 1980s uncovered a well-preserved section of the temple's covered corridors that predate the surviving buildings of Hōryū-ji: "for the history of Japanese architecture, this discovery is of as great moment as the finding of the seventh-century Takamatsuzuka tomb paintings in March 1972 was for the history of Japanese art."[4]

  1. ^ 山田寺跡 [Site of Yamada-dera] (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Retrieved 3 June 2012.
  2. ^ "飛鳥・藤原の宮都とその関連資産群" [Palaces and Related Properties of Asuka-Fujiwara]. Asuka Village. Retrieved 3 June 2012.
  3. ^ "Asuka-Fujiwara: Archaeological sites of Japan's Ancient Capitals and Related Properties". UNESCO. Retrieved 3 June 2012.
  4. ^ Parent, Mary Neighbour (1984). "Yamadadera: Tragedy and Triumph". Monumenta Nipponica. 39 (3). Sophia University: 307–331. doi:10.2307/2384596. JSTOR 2384596.

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