Butsuzōzui
The Butsuzōzui is a collection of Buddhist iconographic sketches said to have been painted by Hidenobu Tosa of the Tosa school. Originally published in 1690 in five volumes, it comprises more than 800 sketches, inspired by the Chinese style of paintings called Paihuo, with the Buddhist icons divided into five parts and further categorized. In Edo-period Japan the Butsuzōzui compendium was the most widely distributed source for information on Buddhist and Shinbutsu deities.
Included area of interest ranges from Nyorai and Bosatsu as well as folk deities including 2=鬼神, 2=暦神 and 2=習合神 as well as fixtures and tools and fixtures applied to rituals. However criticized for errors and misunderstanding, a revised and expanded edition, "2=増補諸宗 仏像図彙" was issued in 1792, a person in Ōsaka, 2=土佐将曹紀秀信. The note to the first edition tells that it was edited by 2=指月軒義山.