Catalog of objects in Butsunichian, the 14th-century inventory of artistic and other properties of Butsunichian 仏日庵, a subtemple of Engakuji 円覚寺 in Kanagawa Prefecture, built by Hōjō Tokimune 北条時宗 (1251-84) in 1282. According to a postscript, the catalog was begun in 1320 (Gen'ō 元応 2), then revised in 1363 (Jōchi 貞治 2) to account for the addition and deletion of objects. The document records Chinese *chinsō 頂相 (priest portraits), *kachōga 花鳥画 (flower-and-bird paintings), butsuga 仏画 (iconic Buddhist paintings), *zenki-zu 禅機図 (Zen theme paintings), and *ryūko-zu 竜虎図 (paintings of tigers and dragons), all from the Song and Yuan dynasties, as well as *bokuseki 墨跡 (priests' calligraphy), hōe 法衣 (vestments), and ceramics. A key document for study of *karamono 唐物 (Chinese objects introduced to Japan) from the 13th century, it also records how various warrior lords, daimyō 大名, and Ashikaga 足利 shoguns purchased art works from the Butsunichian collection. The original document is still kept at Engakuji.