A copy of the Mii Mandara (三井曼荼羅), a mandala depicting the chief divinities and deities of Miidera Temple (三井寺) in Ōtsu
In the left column from the top: the collective shrine of eighteen indigenous luminous deities (十八社明神) enshrined at the temple; Mio Myōjin (三尾明神), local guardian deity of the land where the temple is located; and Enchin (円珍), the ninth-century monk responsible for establishing the temple as a major center of his particular branch of Tendai Buddhism
In the center column from the top: Myōken Sonjō-Ō (妙見尊星王), the Buddhist deification of the Pole Star; Miroku (弥勒仏), the buddha of the future; and Sannō Gongen (山王権現), the manifest deity of Mount Hiei and its environs
In the right column from the top: Fudō Myōō (不動明王), the wrathful deity in his distinctive yellow manifestation particular to the temple; Shinra Myōjin (新羅明神), guardian deity of the branch of Tendai teaching particular to the temple; and Kishimojin (鬼子母神), former demoness & divine guardian of children and childbirth
Of uncertain date and provenance, in the collection of Ensenji Temple (円泉寺) in Hannō City, Saitama Prefecture
Image from the temple’s official blog (see source)













