mount koya

Elemental Gorintos- Okunoin, Mount Koya

Gorintos

The gorintō (五輪塔 lit. five ring tower) is a pagoda found almost only in Japan and believed to have been first adopted by the Shingon and Tendai sects during the mid Heian period. It is used as a tomb marker or as a cenotaph, and is therefore a common sight in Buddhist temples and cemeteries. It is also called gorinsotōba (五輪卒塔婆) ("five-ringed stupa") or goringedatsu (五輪解脱), where the term sotoba is a transliteration of the Sanskrit word stupa.[12]

In all its variations, the gorintō is made of five blocks (although that number can sometimes be difficult to detect), each having one of the five shapes which symbolize of the Five Elements believed to be the basic building blocks of reality: earth (cube), water (sphere), fire (pyramid), air (crescent), and ether, energy, or void (lotus).[11] The last two rings (air and ether) are visually and conceptually united into a single subgroup.

Five elements

  • The square base represents earth

  • The hemispherical dome/vase represents water

  • The conical spire represents fire

  • The upper lotus parasol and the crescent moon represent air

  • The sun and the dissolving point represent the element of space

If you want more: Gorinto: a uniquely Japanese five element stupa (from Elemental Japan website)


SKY ABOVE

EARTH BELOW


Kizuki

The word "Kizuki" can mean the act of "noticing," "realizing," or "becoming aware of" something (気付き) in Japanese.