Ranked as the most important Zen Buddhist temple in Kamakura, Kencho-ji was completed in 1273 and at one point boasted 49 sub-temples. Many of these were lost to fire in the 14th and 15th centuries, but 10 sub-temples remain. The grounds house a number of important structures, including a bell cast in 1255 (designated a National Treasure), a zen garden designed by the 14th century landscaping master, Muso Kokushi, and Butsu-den, a hall displaying a statue of Jizo Bodhisattva. The path up the hill behind the temple grounds provides a good view over Kencho-ji and the Kamakura area.

The path to the viewpoint
Information
Location
Kenchoji, 8 Yamanouchi, Kamakura, Kanagawa 247-8525
« Google Maps »
Getting there
A 20-minute walk from Kita-Kamakura Station on the JR Yokosuka Line or a 25-minute walk from Kamakura Station
Details
8:30-16:30
¥500
You May Also Like

Hozomon Gate

Magnificent inner entrance to Sensoji at south end of the Nakamise shopping street. The original gate was built in 942 but was destroyed by fire in 1631 and then again in 1945 in the Tokyo air raids, having stood for over 300 years. The structure you see today was built in 1964. The statues either side of the gate’s southern face are guardians of the Buddha.

Engakuji Temple

700 year old temple built on the sloping hillsides of Kamakura which is today one of the most important Zen temples in Japan.

Ninnaji

Ninnaji (仁和寺) is a temple in western Kyoto that dates back to the late 9th century. It is…

Tsurugaoka Hachimangu

Kamakura’s most famous shrine. It enshrines the spirit of Hachiman, the divine protector of Japan, its people, and of the Minamoto clan, which established the country’s first shogunate in Kamakura in 1185.