Inryō-ji
| Inryō-ji | |
|---|---|
Inryō-ji Temple (蔭凉寺)
| |
| Location | |
| Location | 10−28 Chūōchō |
| Country | Japan |
| Geographic coordinates | 34°39′24.5″N 133°55′24.4″E / 34.656806°N 133.923444°E |
| Architecture | |
| Founder | Ikeda Tadakatsu |
| Date established | 1632 |
| Completed | 1998 (Reconstruction) |
Inryō-ji (Japanese: 蔭凉寺) is a Buddhist temple in Okayama City, Okayama Prefecture, Japan. It is also known as Inryo-ji, Inryou-ji, or Inryoji. It is a temple of the Myōshin-ji school of the Rinzai sect in Japanese Zen. The temple was founded in 1632 during the Edo period by Ikeda Tadakatsu (the former feudal lord of Okayama who ruled Bizen Province and four districts of Bitchū Province and undertook maintenance of Okayama Castle and expansion of the castle town).