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All Japan Tokyo Ueno Daibutsu
AO Edited

Ueno Daibutsu

Only the face remains of this giant Buddha statue, which is said to be a source of luck for students.

Tokyo, Japan

Added By
Fred Cherrygarden
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The face of the Buddha.   Fred Cherrygarden / Atlas Obscura User
The face of the Buddha.   Fred Cherrygarden / Atlas Obscura User
Ueno Daibutsu, flanked by scores of ema plaques.   Fred Cherrygarden / Atlas Obscura User
The daibutsu and the pagoda.   Fred Cherrygarden / Atlas Obscura User
How the Great Buddha of Ueno used to look.   Fred Cherrygarden / Atlas Obscura User
  Collector of Experiences / Atlas Obscura User
Peeking face of the Buddha   Jaszmina Szendrey / Atlas Obscura User
  Collector of Experiences / Atlas Obscura User
  Collector of Experiences / Atlas Obscura User
Great Buddha   agresti / Atlas Obscura User
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About

Japan is infamous for its education system involving challenging entrance exams not only for colleges, but high schools. A number of superstitions surround these exams, one of which is that it is bad luck to say words that could mean failing tests, such as ochiru ("to fall"), suberu ("to slip") and korobu ("to stumble"). In spring, many families visit shrines dedicated to gakumon-no-kami, or the gods of studying, which are usually deified historical figures such as Sugawara no Michizane, Yoshida Shōin and Ninomiya Kinjirō. Another of these sacred sites is Ueno Daibutsu, or the Great Buddha of Ueno.

The original seated statue of Shaka Nyorai was built in 1631, within the private residence of the lord Hori Naoyori in Ueno. It was made of clay and stood about six feet and nine inches tall, but after an earthquake in 1647, the statue was lost. During the Manji era (1658-1661), a traveling monk named Jō'un made a new, taller statue (about 11 feet and eight inches tall), with a dō hall additionally built around it in 1698. However this one was also lost, after a fire destroyed it in 1841.

In 1843, two years after the second statue was ruined, Hori Naohide, descendant of Naoyori, rebuilt the daibutsu in bronze. This third iteration was the tallest yet, standing at nearly 20 feet tall. But though the bronze proved sturdier than clay or wood, the head of the statue was severely damaged in the Great Ansei Earthquake in 1855.

During the Great Kantō Earthquake in 1923, the head fell off the statue. The Kan'ei-ji Temple took the remnants into its custody, and stored them at the temple as they couldn't afford to rebuild it. After the breakout of the Pacific War, the metal pieces of the Buddha were donated to the army. Everything but the statue's face was lost.

In 1972, the face was placed on the site of the original Great Buddha, where a pagoda dedicated to the Yakushi Triad also stands. Ueno Daibutsu has become famous among students today—it cannot "fall" any further, and it is said that touching its face can give you good luck.

Related Tags

Statues Buddhism Religion Earthquakes Temples Mythology Sacred Spaces

Know Before You Go

Ueno Daibutsu can be found on a hill in Ueno Park, near the restaurant Seiyōken and the Ueno Zoo. It is open every day from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

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Community Contributors

Added By

Fred Cherrygarden

Edited By

allanmurphy, Jaszmina Szendrey, Collector of Experiences, agresti

  • allanmurphy
  • Jaszmina Szendrey
  • Collector of Experiences
  • agresti

Published

February 28, 2020

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Sources
  • https://sanpai-japan.com/2017/07/07/from-buddha-to-bullets-the-history-of-ueno-daibutsu/
  • http://www.deepjapan.org/a/3857
  • https://www.japanvisitor.com/japan-city-guides/ueno-tokyo
  • http://kaneiji.jp/information
Ueno Daibutsu
4-8 Uenokoen
Taito City
Tokyo, 110-0007
Japan
35.71446, 139.772891
Get Directions

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