Koyasan Reihokan Museum

Reference/Local/Exhibition/Literature Museum
This facility preserves and displays invaluable Buddhist imagery and paintings from temples on Mt. Koya, such as the Kongobu-ji temple, the head temple of Shingon Buddhism. Opened in 1921, the museum's collection currently includes some 28 thousand important works of art, including 21 National Treasures, 143 Important Cultural Properties, and 16 Wakayama Prefecturally Designated Cultural Properties. During the extremely popular Great Treasure Hall Exhibition in summer, the museum displays the Eight Great Youths, a sculpture designated a National Treasure that was carved by Unkei, the greatest Buddhist imagery maker of the Kamakura period.

Spot details

Address
Wakayama Pref. Itogunkouyachou Kouyasan 306 map map Map
Phone
0736562029
Hours
[May-Oct.]8:30-17:30(Last entry17:00)
[Nov.-Apr.]8:30-17:00(Last entry16:30)
Closed
New Year's holiday, May be temporarily closed
Fees
[Admission fee] [General] 1,300yen [High school students/university students] 800yen [small/Junior high school students] 600yen
Parking Lot
Available(20spaces)
Credit Card
Available (VISA, MasterCard, JCB, AMEX, UnionPay, DISCOVER, Diners Club)
Smoking
Not available
Wi-Fi
Not available
Can be enjoyed even on a rainy day
Yes
Estimated stay time
30-60 minutes
Wheelchair accessible
Available (stairs to enter, wheelchair available)
Infant friendly
Available

Information Sources:  NAVITIME JAPAN

Review

  • Heian and Kamakura statues you wont see anywhere else
    5.0 Reviewed : 2020.02.22
    Koyasan recently celebrated it 1200th anniversary, and some of the treasures in this museum are that old, loaned from some of the 100 monasteries on this mountain. The museum is small and so displays...
  • ok
    3.0 Reviewed : 2020.01.27
    A small museum composed of 2 rooms with statues and another couple of rooms with early Kamakura/Heisan scrolls. The statues are impressive but unfortunately the museum could not be bothered with...
  • When its raining...
    3.0 Reviewed : 2020.01.06
    If you are into Japanese statues of warriors, paintings of monks and similar items, then fine, but otherwise this is a modest museum more suited to art enthusiasts.

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