{"id":1733,"date":"2016-02-20T17:30:56","date_gmt":"2016-02-20T08:30:56","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/voyapon.com\/?p=1733"},"modified":"2018-05-26T15:14:17","modified_gmt":"2018-05-26T06:14:17","slug":"kamakura-ha-brief-introduction-home-temples-great-buddha","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/voyapon.com\/kamakura-ha-brief-introduction-home-temples-great-buddha\/","title":{"rendered":"Kamakura: Home of temples and a Great Buddha"},"content":{"rendered":"
A short trip from Tokyo and an even shorter trip from Yokohama, Kamakura is one of the true great historic and religious sites in the Tokyo vicinity. Without a doubt, the jewel in Kamakura’s cluster of temples and shrines is the ever popular Daibutsu<\/em> (Great Buddha), one of the worlds largest, and, unlike the larger Buddha in Nara, it is outside, allowing for you to shoot some of what may become your most treasured photos of Japan.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n With its construction completed in 1252, Kamakura’s Great Buddha is over 750 years old and at 13.35 metres (43.8 ft) Kamakura’s Great Buddha is just a little shorter than its younger rival in Nara which stands, or rather sits, over a meter and a half taller at 14.98 metres (49.1 ft).<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n The Great Buddha in Kamakura is a hollow metal statue that allows people to enter its insides and take a look around where you will able to see the seems between the metal sheets that were connected after their castings. Staring up from the centre you will see the wide body of the Buddha as it gets narrower and narrower to the area where from outside its shoulders will be easily recognized. From inside however, without knowing where you were, you wouldn’t realize that the dark circle at its highest height, leading off into darkness, is the Great Buddha’s neck, and through the seemingly tiny hole is none other than the head of the Great Buddha itself!<\/p>\n