Priests' living quarters
With the priests' living quarters / priests' living quarters), it points at houseroom where a priest lives a life in a temple and the building in itself.
I installed priests' living quarters of 3 of the east room / north room (I come and hang) / west room (let me be similar) in the area of the total north side in the structure of the ancient Japanese temple Buddhist monastery as the south side in a lecture hall.
I call this third page priests' living quarters.
In addition, there was the temple which I ran side by side with the north side of the lecture hall as the form that was smaller than it, and set up two priests' living quarters of north floor / the south floor (anything worth).
I consisted of ten beam line shaku rest (about the same with the large tuft that the length makes a pair) follower bunches which I caught a large bunch and courtyard and made a pair, and was built of 40 200-300 in length shaku beam line (depth) shaku before and after in the case of the large temple.
A priest lived in the former, and the latter was considered to be the space where the attendant lived in, and there was the case that the middle bunch (a kitchen) was juxtaposed as the thing which had a function same as a small ovary more.
It was partitioned off a large bunch / follower tuft every length of a crossbeam (a frontage) of about 20 longer than a shaku Rino together, and a tenement house ten divisions or more was performed and named one the one "a bunch".
I installed priests' living quarters of 3 of the east room / north room (I come and hang) / west room (let me be similar) in the area of the total north side in the structure of the ancient Japanese temple Buddhist monastery as the south side in a lecture hall.
I call this third page priests' living quarters.
In addition, there was the temple which I ran side by side with the north side of the lecture hall as the form that was smaller than it, and set up two priests' living quarters of north floor / the south floor (anything worth).
I consisted of ten beam line shaku rest (about the same with the large tuft that the length makes a pair) follower bunches which I caught a large bunch and courtyard and made a pair, and was built of 40 200-300 in length shaku beam line (depth) shaku before and after in the case of the large temple.
A priest lived in the former, and the latter was considered to be the space where the attendant lived in, and there was the case that the middle bunch (a kitchen) was juxtaposed as the thing which had a function same as a small ovary more.
It was partitioned off a large bunch / follower tuft every length of a crossbeam (a frontage) of about 20 longer than a shaku Rino together, and a tenement house ten divisions or more was performed and named one the one "a bunch".