The Ippen Shōnin Eden (一遍 上人 絵 伝; "Illustrated Biography of the itinerant monk Ippen") is a group of emakimono or emaki (painted narrative handscrolls) from the Kamakura period of Japanese history (1185–1333). A set of illuminated manuscripts, they describe the life of Ippen (1234–1289), a Buddhist monk who founded the Ji-shū (時宗; "Time sect") branch of Pure Land Buddhism.
Amongst the various emakimono bearing this title, the original version from 1299, named Ippen Hijiri-e (一遍 聖 絵; "Paintings from the life of the holy man Ippen"), is the best known and most famous. A second version, made in a more accessible style in the 14th century, and named Yugyō Shonin Engi-e (遊行上人縁起絵; "The Pictorial Origin Story of the Itinerant Saint"), also recounts the biography of the monk. As many copies of these two original emakimono were subsequently produced, the whole group is often referred to under the term Ippen Shōnin Eden.