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| irimoya-zukuri@“ü•ꉮ‘¢ | ||||||
| KEY WORD :@architecture / general terms | ||||||
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|  A 
      hip-and-gable roof construction, or a building with this roof construction. A 
      gable type roof has a ridge and gable pediments on the upper part and a hipped 
      roof on the four sides on the lower part. This roof style was introduced from 
      China at the same time as Buddhism in the mid 6c. In Japanese temple buildings 
      the gable part of the roof usually covers the central core *moya •ꉮ, while the hipped part covers the surrounding aisle *hisashi ›ù. This style of roof is used on many types of traditional buildings including 
      castles and folk dwellings. On folk-dwellings, it is often called moya-zukuri •ꉮ‘¢. Its popularity increased during the Kamakura period and continued 
      to be used more and more often for important buildings in the following centuries. 
      Examples; Houryuuji *Daikoudou –@—²Ž›‘åu“°, tile roof (990) in Nara; Toyomitsu Jinja –L–ž_ŽÐ, 
      four-legged gate *Shikyakumon Žl‹r–å, finely layered shingles and cypress bark roof (1323) in Shiga prefecture.  | 
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![]() Houryuuji *Daikoudou –@—²Ž›‘åu“° (Nara) 
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| *noyane –쉮ª, *shikorobuki èC•˜ | ||||||
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(C)2001 Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System.@No reproduction or republication without written permission. Œfڂ̃eƒLƒXƒgEŽÊ^EƒCƒ‰ƒXƒg‚È‚ÇA‘S‚ẴRƒ“ƒeƒ“ƒc‚Ì–³’f•¡»E“]Ú‚ð‹Ö‚¶‚Ü‚·B  | 
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