Off the beaten track in Japan:- Nature, Culture, History, Spirit, Art....
Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Tuesday, December 30, 2014
Manai Shrine
Friday, December 26, 2014
Iwami Mandala Kannon Pilgrimage, Day 2 November 9th 2012
For the second day of this virtually unknown pilgrimage I start at the base of Mount Sanbe and head towards Shizuma, just a few kilometers south of where I started on the first day. That first day was all uphill so today it will be all downhill, though thankfully it is a different route so I do not have to do any backtracking.
There will be a couple of pilgrimage temples on this day, neither of which I have been to before, as well as numerous shrines, including the Ichinomiya, highest ranked shrine, of Iwami.
In the high country Fall was in full swing,
Like 99% of Iwami it was going to be rural with just a few small villages until I reached the coast.
And, of course, there were going to be surprising and unexpected things to see, which really is the main reason I do this walking.....
Wednesday, December 24, 2014
Izumo 33 Kannon Pilgrimage Temple 24 Jyo-onji
Monday, December 22, 2014
Some More Round Windows
My posts on the round windows of Japan have been popular, so here is a selection of ones I've found recently. This first one has to be one of my favorites. It is in an outbuilding in Henshoin Garden, in Kurume, Fukuoka Prefecture.
This one is in the Ohashi House, a wealthy merchants home in Kurashiki, Okayama Prefecture.
This one is in a shelter in the garden next to Fukuyama Castle in Hiroshima Prefecture.
Korakuen garden in Okayama.
The Chinese garden Enchoen, on the shore of Togo Lake in Tottori.
Sunday, December 21, 2014
The Kojin of Rokusho Shrine
Friday, December 19, 2014
The Married Demons of Okazaki Shrine
Okazaki Shrine in the fishing village of Yuki on the Tokushima coast is a small local shrine, now made of concrete. There was no information about which kami is enshrined here.
However there was a wonderful pair of demons carved directly into two sections of massive logs. They were called "Meoto" which usually is translated as married.
There once stood in the shrine grounds a massive, old Tabu no ki tree, which I believe is a kind of Bay tree. The tree became too old and was in danger of falling so it was cut down, and a local man carved the two demons into it.
Wednesday, December 17, 2014
Rokusho Shrine
Tuesday, December 16, 2014
Oimatsu Shrine
Oimatsu Shrine is located just off the main road running through Sasaguri, northeast of Fukuoka. I visited at sunrise on the second day of my Kyushu pilgrimage.
At the entrance stood a massive, old Camphor tree almost 10 meters high. Many of the shrines in this area have big camphor trees, though this one also had a cedar tree whose trunk had divided into two.
Though it is not called a Tenmangu, the kami enshrined here is Sugawara Michizane, known sometimes as Tenjin. There are a lot of Tenjin shrines in this area which is not surprising as it is close to Dazaifu where Sugawara was exiled and died.
There was also a small sumo ring in the grounds. In some areas of Japan shrines will have a sumo ring, and in other areas they won't. Not sure what the deciding factor is or was.
Sunday, December 14, 2014
Adakaya Shrine
Adakaya Jinja
Saturday, December 13, 2014
Gokoku Shrine, Hagi
The Hagi City Gokoku Shrine is located on a hillside in the far north of the city. Many Gokoku shrines were built on former castle sites to imbue them with authority.
Gokoku shrines are in essence branches of the infamous Yasukuni Shrine, and like it are the product of the modern period and very much a part of what would later be known as State Shinto.
Gokoku shrines enshrine all those who died "serving the Emperor", This one was the first Gokoku Shrine I've seen that was virtually abandoned. This is probably due to the fact that in 1939 the government limited its support to just one Gokoku Shrine per prefecture, and the one in Yamaguchi City was chosen.
There was a really nice old well :)