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  1. Feb 29, 2024 · Let me take you through my unexpected but captivating visit to Sengaku-ji Temple, the revered site of the 47 Ronin graves. It’s a story worth sharing, especially if you’re plotting your adventure to this historic corner of Tokyo.

  2. Graves of the forty-seven rōnin at Sengaku-ji. The tombs at Sengaku-ji became a place of great veneration, and people flocked there to pray. The graves at the temple have been visited by a great many people throughout the years since the Genroku era. [6]

  3. Sengakuji Temple – resting place of the 47 ronin. Ōishi Kuranosuke Yoshio statue at the temple entrance. Sengakuji Temple is known for its cemetery. It’s a special one. In it are the graves of the 47 Ronin. This group participated in one of Japan’s most famous yet tragic samurai stories.

  4. Jul 25, 2019 · A school of Soto Zen, one of three traditional Japanese sects of Buddhism, Sengakuji is the final resting place of the Ako Roshi — or 47 Ronin, the masterless samurai.

  5. Apr 13, 2015 · Discover Sengaku-Ji in Tokyo, Japan: This Buddhist temple is home to the graves of the Japanese national legends, the 47 Ronin.

  6. Ronin Graves. Just one stop from Shinagawa on the Toei Asakusa subway line (Sengakuji Station), Sengaku-ji is one of Tokyo’s most famous temples. Although it isn’t big or particularly impressive, it is charged with history. This is where the 47 Ronin (Ronin are masterless samurai) are buried.

  7. Feb 10, 2013 · The temple next to which their graves lie – at the side of their master – is Sengakuji. Nearby Sengakuji Station on the Asakusa Line takes its name from the temple and is a short 5 minute walk up a gentle incline.

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