Shimizuyama Josenji
This temple belongs to the Jōdo sect, a branch of Zōjōji, and was founded in 1414 (the 21st year of Ōei). The present buildings are part of an old Jōdo temple rebuilt in 1780 (the 9th year of An'ei).
The transom above the main hall features openwork carvings of the Sixteen Arhats, and the rear garden is said to have once been counted among the three famous gardens of Izu from the Edo period.
A clear spring wells up beside the temple, giving the place its name. Tokugawa Iemitsu granted the temple a shuin land allotment of ten koku and two to (approximately 10.2 koku), and the temple held rights over forty-five farms in Mukohama.
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