Motsuji Temple Garden — Pure Land Paradise Design
Motsuji Temple was once larger than Chusonji, containing 40 temple buildings and 500 monks' quarters during the Northern Fujiwara era. All structures were destroyed by fire in the 13th–14th centuries. Today, only the magnificent Pure Land garden (Jodo-teien) remains — one of Japan's finest examples of Heian-period garden design and the nation's only surviving large-scale Pure Land garden. The garden centers on Oizumi-ga-ike pond, designed to represent Amida Buddha's Western Paradise. The pond is surrounded by perfectly maintained lawns (where temple buildings once stood), with mountains visible in the distance creating 'borrowed scenery.' The garden includes a yarimizu (winding stream) where courtiers once floated sake cups during poetry parties. The design follows the garden manual 'Sakuteiki' from the 11th century, making it an authentic recreation of Pure Land garden aesthetics. The empty lawns emphasize the garden's scale and the impermanence of physical structures versus enduring landscape design.
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