Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Manju-ji Temple Gardens

 


Manju-ji Temple in Matsue has a delightful pond garden behind the main hall, and an extensive, well-manicured karesansui garden in the front.


It is a large Rinzai Zen temple at the top of the narrow Okutani valley to the north of the castle.


Entry to the temple and garden is free, but the temple remains off the tourist radar.


The temple was established in a different location in 1600, some years before the castle was built.


Its original name was Chojuin.


In 1644 it was moved to its current location after being given the site by Naomasa Matsudaira, the new daimyo of the castle.


At that time it was renamed Shobuyama Chojuji.


Later the name was changed to Manju-ji, though a big fire in 1848 destroyed all records, so the date is unknown.


When I visited in June, the azaleas were in bloom, which added to the visit.


One curious feature, seen in photo 4, is an Imperial Messenger Gate in front of the main hall.


To the right of the main hall is a Kannon Hall, and above it is a Myoken Shrine which enshrines Marishiten, Benzaiten, Daikokuten, and Aizen Myoo. From the shrine you can look down on the pond garden.


The front garden is quite sparse, but subtle.


One nice touch was the small turtle at the centre of the concentric circle of ridges.... exactly how it would appear when a turtle surfaces in a pond.


I can find no date or creator for the rear garden, but it appears to be fairly standard.


There is a small one-room teahouse.


And a few koi in the pond.


The previous post in this series on Matsue and Izumo was on Kanden-an, the remarkable samurai teahouse, villa, and gardens not too far from Monjuji Temple.


Matsue has an unusually large number of quality gardens, in large part due to the legacy of the great Tea Master, Fumai Matsudaira, the daimyo of Matsue Castle.


Some recent garden posts from Matsue I recommend would be Fumon-in temple, garden and Teahouse, the gardens at Lafcadio Heans House, and the garden at Gesshoji Temple.








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Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Kushirogahime Shrine

 


After crossing the Masuda River, my route is now up a trail that leads from a arge torii on the riverbank up to a shrine in the village up above.


Apparently the shrine was originally down here at several sites on the waters edge but was moved after a tsunami in the 11th century.


There are several Buddhist statues and altars on the way up as there used to be 3 temples associated with the shrine but they were all closed in 1868 with the separation of buddhas and Kami.


The original shrine was established very early in the 8th century and is connected to a myth of the Kushiro Clan. Originally from what is now southern Osaka, they are said to be "pioneers" who immigrated here.


A little further up the coast in Kamate are a couple of "islands" just offshore, a male one and a female one. Kushirogahime is the female kami enshrined here, and Kushishikiamenohiko the male. The male is enshrined much further up the coast, not far from my place.


The male comes down to the islands to meet his wife. If in their meeting they agree then a rainbow forms between the two islands. It is said it is rare.


The husband covers his head and face with a scarf, and as it slips to reveal his face, that is the source of the waxing and waning of the moon.


The shrine is listed in the Engi Shiki, meaning it received offering from the Imperial Court.


The shrine was also well supported by the Masuda Clan.


An old, wooden mask from the Edo Period....


A more modern style of mask made from local paper. The kind of mask I make.


The current main hall was built in 1765, but reused some of the materials from the rebuilding in 1548.


At some point, Hachiman was enshrined here as well. The shrine is in possession of the oldest kami statue in Shimane.


The kami is dressed as a Buddhist monk, so it is almost certainly a Hachiman statue.


No idea what these lobsters are about.... they look real creepy.


The shrine has a small pair of stone komainu that were brought from Shikoku.


The shrine is home to 3 "Great Rites", a sumo, a lion dance, and a needle ritual. 


The origin of the three rites was in the time when the shrine was to be relocated and two groups from different villages argued over where it should be. It turned physical and an old lady intervened and in the process lost her favorite needle.


The previous post was on the walk along the beach and across the river mouths to get here.


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Monday, April 20, 2026

Unpenji Temple 66 Shikoku Ohenro Pilgrimage

 


I spent the night at a minshuku at the base of Mount Unpenji. Overnight, there had been a heavy snowfall. 


I set off at first light, before the sun, as I had about 650 meters to climb to reach the temple. The trail was virgin. Not a single footstep had been made in the 6 to 12 inches of powdery snow.


After about an hour of climbing I was overtaken by a couple of younger guys who had been eating breakfast when I left the minshuku. Not only younger, but they were only carrying small day packs, so I watched them hurtle up the mountain and sat and had a cigarette break.


Unpenji Temple, the 66th of the pilgrimage is the highest of the temples at about 900 meters altitude.


Thye Niomon is very new, but not the Nio, although I can't find a date for them.


The temples origins begin with Kobo Daishi who climbed the mountain as a you man. He came back later and established the temple.


On his third visit he carved the honzen statue.


It became a well-supported temple with many branch temples on the mountain and became known as the Koya of Shikoku.


However, in the 11th century a fire completely destroyed the temple.


The temple was restored later and the new honzon, a seated 1000-armed Kannon, and a Bishamonten statue were carved.


The great warlord Motochika Chosokabe visited the temple and spoke with the priest about his plan to rule over all of Shikoku. I am guessing that therefore, Unpenji was one of the few temples in Shikoku he didn't destroy.


Most of the buildings seem to be fairly new.


I wish I had had more time to explore, as there are some fine statues inside.


The temple became much more accessible in 1989 when the Unpenji Ropeway was built.


There is actually quite a lot to see at the temple and it has extensive grounds. It is well known for Autumn colours, but for me at least, the most impressive feature was the 500 life-size statues of the Rakan, or Arhats. I gave them their own post here.


Shrine to Gosha Daigongen, the protective kami of the temple.






The previous temple I stopped at was the Bangai Temple Tsubaki-do, down below. Temple 65, Sankakuji was the previous main temple, and the previous post was on the awesome Rakan statues here at Unpenji


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