It was early May and so everyone was out preparing the paddies and planting the rice.
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
Yaguchi Shrine
It was early May and so everyone was out preparing the paddies and planting the rice.
Labels:
engi shiki,
Izumo Fudoki,
izumo33,
Shrine,
Susano,
yamata no orochi
Monday, January 13, 2014
Kitsune of Shikoku 2
The second installment of photos of fox statues taken on the Shikoku Pilgrimage.
This first one is at the Yosakoi Inari Shrine in Kochi City.
Fox (kitsune) statues will be found at Inari shrines where they serve as guardians. Inari is therefore often erroneously called the Fox God. Actually I was surprised at how few Inari shrines I found on Shikoku compared to some other areas of Japan. This one was at a small shrine in Ehime, not far from temple 40.
This one is at a sub-shrine in the grounds of Taga Shrine, a fertility shrine, in Uwajima, Ehime.
Ryukoji, the 41st temple, was originally part of an Inari Shrine, but the two were separated in 1868.
Wearing a tail-warmer, Taisanji, temple 52 near Matsuyama.
Friday, January 10, 2014
Izumo 33 Kannon Pilgrimage Temple 7 Komyoji
Komyoji
Tuesday, January 7, 2014
Shoin Shrine, Hagi.
One of the most popular tourist sites in Hagi is the Shoin Shrine which enshrines Yoshida Shoin.
Shoin was a local samurai who took part in the anti-shogunate activities that lead up to the Meiji Restoration of 1868, though he was executed in 1859 for his part in an assassination attempt, therefore the shrine is very much a part of modern shinto that emphasised those who supported the emperor and his rule.
The shrine was established in 1890 and moved to its present location in 1950.
Before his death he operated a school that now stands in the grounds of the shrine and many of the future leaders of the Meiji government were taught by him, including Ito Hirobumi, Japands first Prime Minister.
Labels:
hagi,
Shrine,
yamaguchi,
yoshida shoin
Wednesday, January 1, 2014
Monday, December 30, 2013
Kanbara Shrine & Tomb
Labels:
iwatsutsume,
iwatsutsuwo,
izumo33,
kofun,
kuniyuzuri,
okuninushi,
Shrine
Saturday, December 28, 2013
Shikinaen
Shikinaen is the garden built around a secondary palace of the Rykuan Royal Family not far from Shuri Castle in Naha. Being Okinawan it includes both Japanese and Chinese styles. An earlier post on the palace, the Udun, can be found here.
Most fascinating for me was one of the bridges made out of uncut, sharp and gnarly limestone rocks.
There is also a small pavilion but unfortunately cannot be entered.
What makes the garden interesting is the exotic plants that cannot be found in mainland Japanese gardens. There are also views over Naha.
Saturday, December 21, 2013
By way of explanation
Some people get confused by this blog. Many blogs are diaries in chronological form, but mine jumps backwards and forward in time and space. There are a few themes that I return to regularly, manhole designs being one. All the manhole posts can be found by clicking the manhole tag.
Modern architecture is another interest..... click on the architecture tag
I try to post about all the critters I encounter.... click on the fauna tag
I do post vacation snaps... Morocco being a favored destination
Though I havent posted much recently I visit a lot of matsuris, most of which involve Iwami Kagura
Most posts however are concerning my walks around Japan. Currently I am posting about
Shikoku 88 Temple Pilgrimage
Kyushu 108 temple Pilgrimage
Izumo 33 Kannon Pilgrimage
Iwami 33 Kannon Pilgrimage
also
a 3 day walk across the Aki Nada Islands
a 5 day walk across the Kunisaki Peninsula
and a 3 day walk from Honshu to Shikoku starting with the Onomichi Temple Walk.
I post a little from each walk rather than a continuous and chronological sequence from just one.
One topic that is heavily represented is shrines, and an index can be found here.
there are now over 1100 posts, and over the years I have tweeked the code and its all getting a little messy, so I am hoping to start a new blog in what I think will be a better format early in the new year.
Till then I am off walking.........
so seasons greetings to you all
feedback is always appreciated
Thursday, December 19, 2013
Hachizu Shrine
After leaving Usa Hachimangu and heading towards the Kunisaki Peninsula I chose to avoid the main road and instead headed through the back roads through the village of Hachizu where I stopped in at Hachizu Shrine.
There is a very unusual mix of kami enshrined here, the primary being Amenominakanushi, by some accounts the first kami to come into being, yet very little is known or written about him. There were apparently no ancient shrines deicated to him, but in the Meiji era when the buddhas and kami were seperated, many shrines chose to rename Myoken, the deity of the North Star, Amenominakanushi....
The next is Yaekotoshironushi, another version of the name Kotoshironushi, the son of Okuninushi and now more commonly equated with Ebisu. Then there is the pair of kami Mikahayahi and Hihahayahi who who created out of blood dripping from the sword that Izanagi used to kill the god of fire. Finally there is Uganomitama, the female aspect of Inari.
I am guessing that the pile of rice straw is to make new shimenawa. Secondary shrines within the grounds include Kibune, Tenjin, Konpira, Gion, Inari, Dosojin, and Wakamiya.
Labels:
amenominakanushi,
dosojin,
gion,
hihahayahi,
inari,
kibune,
konpira,
kotoshironushi,
kunisaki fall,
kyushu,
mikahayahi,
oita,
Shrine,
tenjin,
uganomitama,
wakamiya
Sunday, December 15, 2013
Along the Road.....Azaleas & Haniwa
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