This as-told-to story is based on a conversation with Justin Miller, a Tokyo-based DJ and English teacher. He shares what he's learned about Tokyo after living in Japan for 15 years. It's been edited for length and clarity.
21.07.2023 - 08:07 / roughguides.com
History is littered with examples of communities who, whether by choice or necessity, have sought to separate themselves from the rest of society. Even today, there are myriad temples and monasteries which shun the outside world. We take a look at ten locations – including sights of refuge, meditation, scientific research and even incarceration – defined by their remote locations and hardy inhabitants.
It’s hard to believe that this pretty Derbyshire village was once the setting for one of the most remarkable events in British history. Following the arrival of the Plague in 1665, its inhabitants agreed to quarantine themselves: for 14 months nobody entered or left the village. Money was left at a boundary stone, still visible today, in exchange for medicines and food from nearby villages. Many people died but this selfless act – and the leadership of the village rector – saved many lives by preventing the spread of the disease. The event is marked on Plague Sunday each August.
Eyam's churchyard © Dale Lorna Jacobsen/Shutterstock
Balanced precariously on a cliffside of the upper Paro valley in Bhutan, this temple and monastery dates back to the seventeenth century, but the sacred origins of the “Tiger’s Nest” go back further to Guru Padmasmbhava, the eighth-century founder of the Mahayana school of Buddhism, who chose this implausible spot for meditation. Getting here involves a three-hour, 700-metre ascent but the views from the complex, comprised of four temples and accommodation quarters for the resident monks, are breathtaking.
Taktsang Palphug Monastery © Avik/Shutterstock
This gravity-defying construction clings to the foot of Mount Hengshan, one of five sacred mountains in China. Seeking silence for meditation, a monk named Liao Ran began construction of this ornate temple in the fifth century and it was gradually expanded to include 40 halls and pavilions. Building materials were lowered down by rope and oak crossbeams were inserted into the cliff face. It is also remarkable for being the only temple in China to enshrine Buddhism, Taoism and Confucianism.
The mountain temple clings to the cliff face © mi jun/Shutterstock
As if the idea of building a monastery on top of a high pinnacle of rock weren’t mind-boggling enough, the Plain of Thessaly in central Greece was once home to 24 of them. In the face of mounting Turkish attacks in the fourteenth century, the monks who had inhabited the caves of Metéora since the eleventh century sought refuge on top of the unusual rock formations found north of Kalambáka. The six monasteries still in use today can be accessed by staircases carved into the rock.
Holy Trinity Monastery in Metéora © Sergey Novikov/Shutterstock
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Whilst not the highest
This as-told-to story is based on a conversation with Justin Miller, a Tokyo-based DJ and English teacher. He shares what he's learned about Tokyo after living in Japan for 15 years. It's been edited for length and clarity.
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