Sunday, November 17, 2024

Hakozakigu Shrine

 


Hakozaki Shrine was founded in 923 when the wakemitama, divided spirit, was enshrined here in Hakata after being brought from the Daibu Hachiman Shrine in what is now Iizuka.


By the 12th century it had become the Ichinomiys, the highest ranked shrine in the province.


During the first Mongol Invasion in 1274 the shrine was burned down.


When the shrine was rebuilt the Emperor Kemeyama sent a scroll with the message "May the enemy nations prostrate themselves (in defeat)" The carved sign above the main gate has this inscription in a copy of the emperors own hand. There are however various theories about exactly which emperors sent the inscription first, and when. 


The shrine burned down several more times during wars, and when Hideyoshi had his campaign to subdue Kyushu he made Hakozaki Shrine his headquarters.


The main gate, photo 1 above, and several buildings are all Important Cultural Properties and date to the mid 16th century when the shrine was rebuilt by Ouchi Yoshitaka.


The current carving of the inscription above the gate dates from 1573 when the gate was rebuilt.


The shrine covers a very large area and is quite spacious, though paintings show that prior to 1868 there were many pagodas and other Buddhist structures within the ground.


Originally just a short distance from the sea, as the land has encroached on the sea the road leading to the shrine from the water has gotten longer.


Being a Hachiman shrine, the primary kami are Ojin, Jingu, and Tamayorihime.


In the penultimate photo below, a red fence encircles a pine tree known as the Box Pine. It is said that when Ojin was born, not far away in the hills overlooking what is now Fukuoka, his umbilical cord was placed in a box and buried on this spot.


Hakozaki means "Cape of the box".


I visited early in the morning of  76th day of my walk along the Kyushu 108 temple Pilgrimage. The previous post was on a small. local Kumano Shrine south of Fukuoka City


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