User:Underbar dk/Japanese-English Bilingual Corpus of Wikipedia's Kyoto Articles/Q11482424

Heike Nokyo edit

Heike Nokyo (平家納経) is a general term representing the Buddhist scriptures donated to Itsukushima Shrine by the Taira clan with prayer for prosperity of the greater Tairafamily including Ise-Heishi.

The donated scriptures comprise 30 volumes of the Lotus Sutra, one each of the Sukuhavati sutra, the Heart Sutra and Tairano Kiyomori's gammon (Buddhist prayer) in his own hand, kyobako (boxes in which the Buddhist scriptures are kept) and a karabitsu (six-legged Chinese-style chest).

The scriptures are decorated gorgeously and luxuriously, demonstrating to viewers today the prosperity of the family. They are typical works of decorated Buddhist scriptures in the Heian period, best-class historical materials communicating features of artifacts of the times to the present day.

The scriptures were brush-copied by Kiyomori, Tairano Shigemori, Tairano Yorimori, Tairano Norimori and other members of the family. The copying task was shared among the family members, each responsible for one volume. Reading the postscript to each volume of the scriptures donated to Itsukushima-jinja Shrine in 1164, one knows that it was not until 1167 that all of the scriptures were completed.

They are preserved to date, and all the volumes were designated as national treasures in 1954.

They are at present owned by and preserved at Itsukushima Shrine, and their replicas are publicly exhibited at Takaramono-kan (Treasure Pavilion) of Itsukushima Shrine.

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