Ryūtaku-ji
Ryūtaku-ji is a Buddhist temple belonging to the Myōshin-ji branch of the Rinzai school of Japanese Zen, Buddhism located in Mishima, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan.
History
Although temple records have been lost, the temple claims to have been founded by Kūkai in the Heian period at what is now Atago in Tokyo. It was converted to the Rinzai school in the Keicho era and relocated to Mishima by Hakuin Ekaku in 1761. Although reconstructed in the early Meiji period, it had all but failed into ruins by the Taisho period, until revived by the efforts of Gempō Yamamoto.Abbots
- Soen Nakagawa, abbot of Ryūtaku-ji until 1984
- Sochu Suzuki, abbot of Ryūtaku-ji 1984-1990
- Kyudo Nakagawa, abbot of Ryūtaku-ji 1990-2007
- Eizan Goto, abbot of Ryūtaku-ji since 2008
Western transmission
Nakagawa was known for his enigmatic behavior derived from his dedication to ascetic and solitary Zen practice, and his rejection of the excessive formalism of the Zen hierarchy in Japan.
Kyudo Nakagawa was the abbot of Ryūtaku-ji up until his death in December 2007. Since January 2008, the new abbot of Ryūtaku-ji is Eizan Goto, who is also the Zen Master of Centre Assise, a meditation center near Paris.
Category:Buddhist temples in Shizuoka Prefecture
Category:Rinzai temples
Category:Myoshin-ji temples
Category:Buildings and structures in Mishima, Shizuoka
Category:Temples of Avalokiteśvara