The Art of Japanese Architecture. David Young
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1 Lumber used in the construction of Asukadera, the first temple in Japan (596), is preserved in the Zenshitsu (Meditation Hall) of Gangōji, reconstructed soon after the temple burned in 1451.
2 Hōryūji burned in 670 and was rebuilt some time in the next forty years. It contains the oldest wooden buildings in the world.
3 Three-story pagoda of Hōkiji, sometimes spelled Hokkiji (completed in 706).
4 The east pagoda of Yakushiji (730).
5 The Main Hall, originally the refectory, of Shin-Yakushiji (747).
6 Tegai Gate, Shōsōin, and part of the Sangatsudō (or Hokkedō) at Tōdaiji (around 748).
7 The Main Hall and Lecture Hall of Tōshōdaiji. The date of the former is early but uncertain. The latter, originally part of the Heijōkyō Palace, was moved to Tōshōdaiji in 763 and remodeled in the thirteenth century. Also located on the Tōshōdaiji grounds are two original log storehouses.
8 Miniature pagoda in the treasure house of Goku-rakubō Monastery at Gangōji (late eighth century).
The bell tower with a tile roof at Tōdaiji Temple in Nara. Rebuilt in the Kamakura Period, the tower houses a bell dating to 752. Both the tower and bell are National Treasures.
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