30/04/2013

onsha - venerable shrine

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onsha, misha, gosha 御社 "venerable shrine"
mi-yashiro, on-yashiro


There are many varieties to pronounce these characters.
on, mi, go is an expression of honor.


. Shrine, Shinto Shrine (jinja 神社) - Introduction .

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. Masaoka Shiki 正岡子規 visiting shrines and temples .

Trying to locate the various shrines and temples where Shiki wrote the following haiku.
If you know any location, please add it as a comment to this entry.
Thank you!



Look at more photos :
source : 4travel.jp/domestic


御社や庭火に遠き浮寐鳥
miyashiro ya niwabi ni tooki ukinedori

this venerable shrine -
in the ritual garden fire far beyond
water birds sleeping in their nests



niwabi 庭火 bonfire lit during a shrine festival at night.
garden watch fire


- - - - -



御社壇に小春の爺が腰かけて
goshadan ni koharu no jiji ga koshikakete

at the venerable shrine
on an Indian summer day
an old man just sits there






shadan at Toyama, Oyama Jinja Zendate Shadan 雄山神社前立社壇

shadan 社壇 "main shrine", place of worship
see below


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御社雪囲ひして雪すくな
on-yashiro yukigakoi shite yuki sukuna

the venerable shrine
protected by a snow shed
but little snow



In regions with heavy snow in Northern Japan, buildings have to be protected during the winter season.

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田の上に春の月ある御社
ta no ue ni haru no tsuki aru on-yashiro

above the fields
the full moon of spring
above this venerable shrine



. Takano Sujuu 高野素十 Takano Suju .


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どんぐりを踏み割り保良の御社
川崎展宏

凍る池小さし御社いと小さし
高木晴子

初霞して御社の杉にほふ
柴田白葉女

寄生木の春のみどりの御社
川崎展宏

御社に花の東京の標準木
高澤良一

御社の水汲む息を白くして
小林ゆき子

村歌舞伎演ず御社えごま干す
八牧美喜子


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shadan 社壇 "main shrine", place of worship


. Masaoka Shiki 正岡子規 visiting shrines and temples .


彳むや社壇から見る稻の雲
tatazumu ya shadan kara miyuru ina no kumo

from this shrine
situated so venerably I see
the thunder clouds




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社壇百級秋の空へと登る人
社壇百級秋の月へと上る人
shadan hyakyuu aki no tsuki e to noboru hito

hundred steps to the shrine
toward the full moon of autumn
people climb up




source : www.matsuyama-guide.jp


These stone steps lead up to the shrine Shinonome Jinja 東雲神社 near the castle of Matsuyama, where Shiki lived.
This shrine had been established by lord Matsudaira Sadamichi 松平定通 (1805 - 1835) of the Matsuyama domaine. There are in fact 201 steps to climb up.
The shrine was once located within the castle compound.


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29/04/2013

yamamiya and satomiya

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Yamamiya 山宮 Mountain Shrine - Satomiya 里宮 Village Shrine

yama no miya 山の宮
sato no miya 里の宮


source : oobuchi2012
Yamamiya Sengen Jinja 山宮浅間神社 - for Mount Fuji


quote
"Mountain shrine" and "village shrine."
In cases where a shrine complex is composed of multiple sanctuaries, the one located at the top or midway up the side of a mountain is called the yamamiya (mountain shrine), while the one located near human habitation at the foot of the mountain is called the satomiya (village shrine).
The yamamiya may also be called the okumiya or okusha (remote shrine), while the satomiya found low on the mountain is sometimes called the shimosha (lower shrine 下社).

According to generally accepted views, satomiya were first established as expedients to allow more convenient worship of kami originally enshrined in remote yamamiya located higher on the mountain. In some cases, a single yamamiya may be associated with multiple satomiya.

Also, while the satomiya normally functions as a shrine continuously throughout the year, the yamamiya is accessible only during festivals, and during the period from spring until early fall, when the mountain is considered "open" to visitors. Representative examples of yamamiya-satomiya pairs include the shrines
Mitake Jinja 御嶽神社, Sengen Jinja 浅間神社, and Kanasana Jinja 金鑚神社.
source : Nakayama Kaoru, Kokugakuin 2005



. okumiya 奥宮 "innermost shrine" Okumiya shrine .


. Yama no Kami 山の神 God of the Mountains, Ta no Kami 田の神 God of the Fields.

. Yama no Sachi 山の幸 Food from the Mountains,
. Umi no Sachi 海の幸 Food from the Sea.

and related deities


. Sengen Jinja 浅間神社 . for Mount Fuji 富士山
and the Yoshida no Himatsuri 吉田の火祭り Yoshida Fire Festival


. Shrine, Shinto Shrine (jinja 神社) - Introduction .

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山宮の笛きこえくる汐干かな
yamamiya no fue kikoekuru shiohi kana

I hear the flute
from the mountain shrine -
ebb tide


Sasaki Yuufuu 佐々木有風 Sasaki Yufu (1891 - 1959)


. WKD : shiohi 汐干 潮汐(しおひ) ebb tide .

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source : 丹後國加佐郡住人
Prince Shotoku Taishi on his Black Horse, in Kaii 甲斐の黒駒


里宮に黒駒太子黍の秋
satomiya ni Kurokoma Taishi kibi no aki

at the village shrine
resides Taishi on his Black Horse -
millet in autumn



Tachibanadera 橘寺 in Asuka, Nara, birthplace of Prince Shotoku

quote
In front of the temple is a bronze statue of a horse named Kurokoma [Black Pegasus] who was the beloved horse that Shōtōku Taishi used to ride to various localities to spread the word of Buddhism. It was also said the Prince often rode this horse to Ikaruga (Hōryū-ji Temple) and that the horse had miraculous powers, including the ability to fly.


With Shōtoku Taishi on his back, Kurokoma flew for three days and around the country, never tiring. Shōtoku Taishi left a stone memorial to the horse, which the great Buddhist monk Kōbō Daishi [774-835] later commented on during his trip to Tachibana Temple.
source : japantourist.jp/view

In Tohoku there are many temples with statues of Taishi on his Black Horse,
as part of the Mountain Religion 山岳宗教 of this region.

. Tachibanadera 橘寺 .

. Shotoku Taishi 聖徳太子 Shotoku Taishi .

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里宮も戸隠道も葛の秋
satomiya mo Togakushi michi mo kuzu no aki

at the village shrine
and at the road to Mount Togakushi -
arrowroot in autumn



. Togakushi Jinja 戸隠神社 Togakushi Shrine, Nagano .

. WKD : kuzu 葛 arrowroot, Pueraria lobata .


Nishimoto Itto
西本一都 (1907 - 1991)


quote
The World: Japan's Nature; A People Tremble in Harmony With the Land

Earth shakes, ground trembles.
With great weight of snow,
The tight rope snaps back.

Itto Nishimoto
source : www.nytimes.com/1995 - NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF


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Hotaka Jinja, Hodaka Jinja - Satomiya 穂高神社(里宮)


杣も来つ穂高里宮春まつり
soma mo kitsu Hotaka Satomiya haru matsuri

the woodcutters have also come -
shrine Satomiya at Mount Hotaka
at the spring festival


Watanabe Tatsuo 渡辺立男


The deity is Hodakami no Mikoto 穂高見命(ほだかみのみこと)
Hotakami no Mikoto.

- Reference - Hodaka Shrine -


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sonsha 村社 "villge shrine"

quote
Village shrines, a category of shrine stipulated under the shrine system established in the Meiji era. The broad categorization was between official shrines (kansha) and other shrines (shosha), and village shrines fell into the latter category, under gōsha. (goosha 郷社).

In the gōsha teisoku (Regulations for Rural District Shrines) of 1871, village shrines were defined as subordinate to gō shrines, but gradually thereafter they came to be recognized as an independent shrine rank. Generally, shrines dedicated to the village ujigami (tutelary deity) were those stipulated as sonsha.

At the end of the Pacific War, there were forty-four thousand nine hundred thirty-four sonsha; there were more of these than any other category bar those shrines of no rank (mukakusha). About one third of these sonsha were in receipt of public funds for offerings on the occasion of kinensai, the niinamesai and the shrine's own annual rites (reisai). After the war, in 1946, the shrine system was abolished, and the label of village shrine ceased to have official value.
source : Inoue Nobutaka, Kokugakuin, 2007




gōsha, goosha 郷社 "villge shrine"

quote
Rural District Shrines.
A shrine rank instituted in the Modern shrine ranking system. The modern shrine ranking system was divided into the two general categories of kansha (state shrines) and shosha (assorted shrines).

Gōsha were included in the latter category below the municipal and prefectural shrines and above village shrines (sonsha). Shrines dedicated to local protector deities (ubusunasha) in a given locality were nominated as gōsha. Under the 1871 gōsha regulations (gōsha teisoku), each district was allocated its own gōsha. In a district with multiple shrines venerating different protector deities, the most popular of them was designated gōsha.
From 1922, municipal districts and prefectures funded offerings to gōsha on the occasions of the Kinensai and Niinamesai rites, and also for the shrine's own annual festival (reisai). At the end of the war, the rank of gōsha disappeared with the abolition of the shrine ranking system.
source : Inoue Nobutaka, Kokugakuin 2007



. ujigami 氏神 tutelary deity, guardian/patron deity, clan deity .
and ubusunagami 産土神 God of one's birthplace
- - - - - ubusuna mairi 産土神参 etc.


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28/04/2013

Okumiya Shrines

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okumiya 奥宮 "innermost shrine" Okumiya shrine

oku no miya 奥の宮 - okusha 奥社

There are various translations for this term, it is a smaller shrine located behind the main shrine, sometimes on the top of the mountain, but dedicated to the same deity as the main shrine on the bottom of the mountain.
The way up to a mountain shrine usually leads through a nature path or stone steps and can be quite an ardous mountain climb with the mind of a devout pilgrim.

remote shrine, rear shrine, interior shrine

Sometimes also called okusha 奥社, yamamiya 山宮 "mountain shrine"


The highest "Okumiya" in Japan is on the top of Mount Fuji.


This shrine stands at the end of the trail starting from Fujinomiya. Because Fuji itself is the god's body, there is no inner shrine, only outer and middle shrines.
source : www.fuji-hongu.or.jp


. Shrine, Shinto Shrine (jinja 神社) - Introduction .


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. Masaoka Shiki 正岡子規 visiting shrines and temples .

Trying to locate the various shrines and temples where Shiki wrote the following haiku.
If you know any location, please add it as a comment to this entry.
Thank you!



source : hirokikurioka
Kibune Jinja 貴船神社 Kyoto


木の緑したゝる奥の宮居哉
ki no midori shitataru oku no miya i kana

the green of the trees
drips down to this
Okumiya shrine



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. Kibune Shrine 貴船神社 in the mountains of Kurama, Kyoto .
Kibune Jinja, Kifune Jinja 貴船神社


貴船川涼し涼しと奥宮へ
Kibunegawa suzushi suzushi to Okumiya e

the river Kibunegawa
so cool, so cool toward
the Okumiya shrine


Tomita Yoshie 富田よしえ



昼灯す貴船奥宮余花の雨
hiru tomosu Kibune Okumiya yoka no ame

to brighten the day
at Kibune Okumiya shrine,
late cherry blossoms in rain


Yoshida Sayuri 吉田百合子


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. Hotaka Jinja 穂高神社 Nagano .
and the Azumi clan 安曇族



source : 穂高神社 上高地明神池 奥宮
Hodaka Shrine Kamikochi - Okumiya (Hotaka Shrine)


穂高奥宮つゆけき目細鳴けるのみ
Hotaka Okumiya tsuyukeki meboso nakeru nomi

toward Okumiya of Mount Hotaka
all wet with dew, I narrow my eyes -
only birdsong


Yamashita Yoshiko 山下喜子



Stamp and inscription from the Okumiya, as a proof you have really been there.


. Hotaka Satomiya 穂高里宮 Village Shrine at Hotaka (Hodaka) .


HP of the shrine
長野県安曇野市穂高6079
source : www.hotakajinja.com

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Katori Okumiya 香取奥宮


白梅や香取奥宮黒づくめ
hakubai ya Katori Okumiya kurozukume

these white plum blossoms -
at Okumiya shrine of Katori
they begin to turn black


Naikai Ryoota 内海良太


. Katori Jinguu 香取神宮 Katori Shrine in Chiba .

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source : goyoutyann.jugem.jp

Oku no miya of Mount Tsukuba 筑波の奥の宮 - 女体山の奥宮


威銃とどく筑波の奥の宮
odoshi todoku Tsukuba no Oku no Miya

deer scarer sounds
reach up to here - Mount Tsukuba
Oku no Miya 


Hikita Hanako 疋田華子


. Mount Tsukuba and its shrines 筑波山神社 .


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夜ざくらやなほ奥宮へ石畳
飯野燦雨

奥宮にあしたより立つ夕立雲
松村蒼石

奥宮に祭の幟鳥さかる
高井北杜

奥宮の山雨に濡るる祭檜葉
つじ加代子

奥宮の御手洗小さし鴨足草
轡田 進

奥宮の杉生香に立つ初明り
長尾久子

奥宮の留守の淋しさいさぎよし
下村梅子

奥宮の階に綿毛や暖め鳥
鳥越すみこ

奥宮は朝より暮色眼細鳴く
豊長みのる

奥宮は雲の中なり松毟鳥
篠田悌二郎

奥宮へ川床段々に貴船川
峰山 清

奥宮へ石段つゞき花つゞき
藤後左右

奥宮へ磴あと幾つ木の実降る
加藤多眠王

奥宮へ辿りつきたる七五三
清崎敏郎

奥宮へ風か桜を渡り行く
川崎展宏

奥宮や蝉脱け出たる穴二つ
松本旭


奥の宮人は居らねど祭かな
比叡 野村泊月

奥の宮修理なりたる木の芽かな
比叡 野村泊月


梅雨茸を掃いて奥宮仕へかな
片桐孝明


菊戴奥宮の空ひらけたり
杉浦恵子


駈梵天奥の宮まで駈け通す Kake Bonten
宋岳人


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"Hodakayama"
Yoshida Hiroshi (1876-1950)


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. Yamamiya 山宮 Mountain Shrine - Satomiya 里宮 Village Shrine .

An "Uppermost Temple" is called "Oku no In" 奥の院. (TBA)


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27/04/2013

Gokoku Jinja

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Gokoku Jinja 護国神社 Gokoku Shrine
shookonsha 招魂社 "spirit-inviting shrine" - Shokon Shrine



Gokoku Shrine of Hyogo prefecture in Himeji - 兵庫縣姫路護國神社


quote
Gokoku jinja
"Shrines for the protection of the nation,"
shrines dedicated to the spirits of individuals who died in Japanese wars from the end of the early modern period through World War II. Throughout most of the prewar period these shrines were known as shōkonsha or " spirit-inviting shrines," but all shōkonsha (over one hundred) built since the Meiji period were renamed gokoku jinja in 1939 following a Home Ministry ordinance issued that year.

The ordinance divided the shrines into two categories:
"specially selected gokoku jinja" designated by the Home Minister, and other gokoku jinja not so designated.

The "designated" shrines were in principle limited to one per prefecture, and the enshrined spirits (saijin) were likewise limited to those of people who had resided inside the respective prefecture. Each shrine was staffed by one chief priest and several associate priests.

None of the shrines were assigned honorific ranks (shakaku) within the modern shrine ranking system (see kindai shakaku seido), yet the ministerially designated shrines received treatment as de facto "prefectural shrines," while the other, non-designated shrines were considered equivalent to "village shrines."

Following Japan's defeat in World War II, the shrines were placed under strict observation by the occupation armies, and many of the shrines changed their titles, though most have today reverted to their original names. Since the war's end, the shrines have been divorced from national administration and have followed the pattern of other shrines, registering themselves as religious juridical persons and becoming independent religious corporations under the umbrella of the Association of Shinto Shrines (Jinja Honchō). In most cases, they have added to their lists of enshrined kami individuals who have died in service to local public organizations.
Tokyo's Yasukuni Jinja acted as the central or home shrine for gokoku jinja nationwide.
source : Inoue Nobutaka, Kokugakuin 2005



. Yasukuni Shrine 靖国神社 Yasukuni Jinja . Tokyo
Yasukuni matsuri 靖国祭 Yasukuni shrine festival
Shookonsai 招魂祭(しょうこんさい) Shokonsai, "soul summoning rite", "spirit inviting rite"

April 21 till 23 Shunki Reitaisai (Annual Spring Festival)
Purification ritual in the afternoon of 21. - Official prayers for the Dead on 22.



. Shrine, Shinto Shrine (jinja 神社) - Introduction .

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source : isaniha.exblog.jp
sunset behind Gokoku shrine, Matsuyama


夕焼けて護国神社の裏しづか
yuuyakete Gokoku jinja no ura shizuka

at sunset
the back of the Gokoku shrine
is so quiet


. 飯田龍太 Iida Ryuta .


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source : www.mapple.net/spots
Hida Takayama Gokoku Jinja, Gifu
岐阜県高山市堀端町90


高山の護国神社の栗小粒
Takayama no Gokoku jinja no kuri kotsubu

at the shrine
Gokoku jinja in Takayama
the chestnuts are small





source : www.city.saga.lg.jp
Gokoku jinja in Saga town 佐賀県護国神社 with old camphor trees


楠かほる護国神社に詣づらく
kuzu kahoru Gokoku jinja no moodezuraku

fragrance of camphor -
the Gokoku shrine is difficult
to visit


. WKD : kusunoki 楠木 camphor tree .


Takazawa Ryooichi 高澤良一 Takazawa Ryoichi


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shookonsha 招魂社 "spirit-inviting shrine" - Shokon shrine


source : 川端たぬき
勝平得之「招魂社」(千秋公園八景)昭和八年
Painting from Showa 8. Chiaki Park, Akita - by Katsuhira Tokushi (1904 - 1970)

You can also see the cannon at the left side.


午砲まで蝉の鳴き降る招魂社
gohoo made semi no nakifuru shookonsha

till the midday cannon
there are only the cicadas shrilling
at the Shokon shrine . . .


. Tsukushi Bansei 筑紫磐井 .

Since 1871 it was customary to have a canon fired at 12:00 midday at the Imperial Palace in Tokyo to tell the time to the citizens.
In 1929 this custom was stopped and a siren sounded instead.


In the Edo period, when people did not own clocks, it was customary to ring the temple bell.
. toki no kane 時の鐘 the bell for telling time .


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寒紅梅馥郁として招魂社
kankoobai fujuiku to shite shookonsha

red plum blossoms in the cold
are just so fragrant -
Shokon Shrine


. Takahama Kyoshi 高浜虚子 .



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26/04/2013

Nagodera

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. 坂東三十三観音 Pilgrimage to 33 Kannon Temples in Bando .
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Nagodera 那古寺
Fudarasan Nagoji 補陀洛山 那古寺 Fudara San Nago-Ji

located in the city of Tateyama in southern Chiba Prefecture, Japan.
The temple is also called "Nago-ji" using the alternate pronunciation of the final Chinese character in its name, or the "Nago Kannon" (那古観音), after its primary object of worship.

Nago-dera is located on the middle slopes of Mount Nago at the southern tip of the Bōsō Peninsula, and is surrounded by forest. The area around the temple has important stands of sudajii Castanopsis, the tabunoki machilus species of laurel, the yabunikkei species of cinnamomum, camellia and the himeyuzuri species of daphniphyllum.

History
According to temple legend contained in the Nago-dera engi text, Nago-dera was founded by the wandering holy ascetic Gyōki around 717 AD to pray for the recovery of Empress Genshō from an illness. However, no historical documents have survived to substantiate this legend, and the history of the temple is thus uncertain. Most of the temple was destroyed by a fire in 1703, and its oldest existing structures are its Hondō (本堂) main hall (1759) and Tahōtō (多宝塔) pagoda (1761), both of which are registered as Chiba Prefectural Important Cultural Properties.



Nago-dera was used as a place of worship by successive samurai and clans, starting with Minamoto Yoritomo (1147 – 1199), Ashikaga Takauji (1305 - 1358), Yoshizane Satomi (1412 – 1488) and members of the Tokugawa clan.

The temple currently belongs to the Shingon Chizan Sect of Japanese Buddhism. Its Gohonzon (primary object of veneration) is a bronze statue of Senju Kannon Bosatsu (千手観世音菩薩, Senju Kanseion Bosatsu),which dates from the Kamakura period. This statue is a national Important Cultural Property.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !


This temple is Nr. 33 on the pilgrimage to 33 Kannon temples in the Kanto region.
坂東三十三観音霊場33番


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Look at more photos here:
source : karopapa.cocolog-nifty.com


. Kannon Bosatsu 観音菩薩 .



眼前に春潮溢る那古観音
ganzen ni shunchoo afuru Nago Kannon

in front of my eyes
the spring tide is full -
Nago Kannon


Ishii Tooin 石井桐陰 Ishii Toin
Haiku poet of the Taisho and Meiji period.


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omamori お供物とお守り amulets and offerings

Look at more photos from the temple and spring festival
source : yoshi883t


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. Masaoka Shiki 正岡子規 visiting shrines and temples .

那古寺の椽の下より秋の海
Nagodera no en no shita yori aki no umi

below the veranda
of temple Nagodera
the sea in autumn




source : 4travel.jp/domestic


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補陀洛山那古寺の飛花は海へかな
Fudarasan Nagoji no hika wa umi e kana

from Fudara san
temple Nagoji the blossoms flutter
down to the sea . . .


Kawasaki Akiho 川崎晃帆



source : landscape-photo.seesaa.net



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25/04/2013

Jinguu - Jingu Shrine

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Jinguu, jingû 神宮 Jingu. important shrine
kamumiya, kamu miya, kanmiya, kan miya

There are many shrines with this name in Japan.
For example

熱田神宮 Atsuta Jingu
平安神宮 Heian Jingu
伊勢神宮 Ise Jingu
明治神宮 Meiji Jingu


. WKD : Jinja 神社 Shinto Shrines - Introduction .



The title of jingû is the highest appellation; it includes Ise no Jingû and other special shrines dedicated to imperial ancestors or emperors or having an otherwise distinguished background.
. Daijinguu 大神宮 Daijingu .

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. Masaoka Shiki 正岡子規 visiting shrines and temples .

Trying to locate the various shrines and temples where Shiki wrote the following haiku.
If you know any location, please add it as a comment to this entry.
Thank you!

神宮の判すわりけり初暦
jinguu no han suwarikeri hatsugoyomi

the stamp
of the shrine right in the middle -
this new calendar


. hatsugoyomi 初暦 (はつごよみ) "first calendar" calendar for the New Year .




神宮館百彩暦 Calendar from Tokyo Jingu


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Iris at Meiji Jingu, Tokyo

神宮の菖蒲見てあり誕生日
jinguu no shoobu mite ari tanjoobi

looking at the iris
at Meiji Jingu -
my birthday


Oohashi Shuuooshi 大橋櫻坡子 Ohashi Shuoshi


. Meiji Jinguu 明治神宮 Meiji Jingu . Tokyo


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時の日や近江神宮御造営
青木月斗

神宮のどの木も蝉の木となりぬ
細川淳子

神宮の初鳩人に驚かず
小島富夫

神宮の副業という花菜漬
山縣輝夫

神宮の杜に二、三尾バチマグロ
攝津幸彦

神宮の沓に木の実のはずみけり
唯野嘉代子

種かしや太神宮へ一つかみ
其角

薪能平安神宮朱と緑
関口比良男

蚕屋くらき壁に神宮暦つつて
長谷川素逝

街に来る神宮の鳩春隣
村田 脩

雨の中大神宮に札納
橋本こま女


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honsha - main shrine

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honsha 本社 - honguu  本宮 main shrine


source : www.shoin-jinja.jp
Shoin Jinja 松陰神社本社, Hagi, Yamaguchi


. WKD : Jinja 神社 Shinto Shrines - Introduction .


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. Masaoka Shiki 正岡子規 visiting shrines and temples .

Trying to locate the various shrines and temples where Shiki wrote the following haiku.
If you know any location, please add it as a comment to this entry.
Thank you!


秋の山半腹に本社社務所など
aki no yama hanpuku ni honsha shamusho nado

mountain in autumn -
midway up the main shrine, shrine office
and other buildings





御本社につきあたりけり夏木立
go honsha ni tsukiatari-keri natsu kodachi

near the main
shrine building -
a grove in summer



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24/04/2013

sandoo approach

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sandoo - sandō 参道 Sando access road to a shrine or temple


source : Rico's Photos


In Japan, all travel destinations have their local souveniers and many stores sell them along the access roads to temples and shrines (sandoo 参道 ) and of course at the station.
. omiyage, o-miyage お土産 local souvenir .


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Omotesandō (表参道)
is an avenue, subway station and neighborhood in the Minato and Shibuya wards in Tokyo stretching from Harajuku station, specifically, the foot of Takeshita Street, to Aoyama-dori where Omotesandō station can be found. Zelkova trees line both sides of the avenue. Around 100,000 cars drive down the main street daily.

Omotesandō was originally created as the frontal (表 Omote) approach (参道 Sandō) to Meiji Shrine, when the Shrine was dedicated in the Taishō era.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !


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The Nakamise-dōri, Nakamise-doori (仲見世通り) Nakamise Asakusa 浅草寺



is a street on the approach to the Asakusa Kannon temple. It is said to have come about in the early 18th century, when neighbors of Sensō-ji were granted permission to set up shops on the approach to the temple. However, in May 1885 the government of Tokyo ordered all shop owners to leave. In December of that same year the area was reconstructed in Western-style brick. During the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake many of the shops were destroyed, then rebuilt in 1925 using concrete, only to be destroyed again during the bombings of World War II.

The length of the street is approximately 250 meters and contains around 89 shops.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !


source : Stuart on facebook, 2019
Nakamise, 1904

. Asakusa Kannon 浅草観音 - Tokyo .


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新山や雪の参道裸者登る
Shinzan ya yuki no sandoo rasha noboru

naked men
climb the snowy approach –
Shinzan shrine


Hidenori Hiruta

. Shinzan Jinja 新山神社 . Akita



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source : photozou.jp
Meiji Jingu

参道の砂利踏んでくる軍靴
sandoo no jari funde kuru ikusagutsu (gunka)

along the access road to the shrine
the sound of military boots
stepping on the gravel


Amano Seiki 天野静鬼

- - - - -

赤すぎはせぬか参道の葉鶏頭
綾野道江

帝釈天参道に買ふ草の餅
中山喜代

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- #sando #nakamise -
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ujiko - local worshippers

[ . BACK to DARUMA MUSEUM TOP . ]
. Legends about the Clan and Family Deities .
ubusugami, see below
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ujiko 氏子 local worshiper, parishioner of a Shinto shrine


source : kasamori.jimdo.com

They help arrange the seasonal festivals of their shrine and carry the mikoshi palanquin in the festival parade.
They all wear a happi coat of the same pattern. For official situations, they might even come in the formal trouser-skirt, hakama 袴.

quote
Ujiko
Generally, a group from the land surrounding the areas dedicated to the belief in and worship of one shrine; or, the constituents of that group. Because that shrine's kami is called the ujigami, the corresponding term ujiko is used.

There is another term for ujiko, sūkeisha, but often it is the case that the two are distinguished by a geographical classification with ujiko referring to the person from that shrine's ujiko district and sūkeisha referring to the person from outside the district. However, there are also occasions when they are used interchangeably. Article ninety-nine of the present Shūkyō hōjin jinja honchō chōki dictates "Following precedent, we call believers who bear the obligation of supporting the shrine, that shrine's ujiko or sūkeisha, and these persons are to be registered in the respective ujiko and sūkeisha lists."

However, that article is for establishing registration lists, and in article fifteen of the Jinja honchō kenshō it states, "The ujiko is, traditionally, a person who resides in the ujiko district, and the other believers are sūkeisha. Ujiko and sūkeisha are the foundation of shrine support, and the parental body supporting its growth." So, rather than the organizational concept of registration lists, it is defining ujiko emphasizing the traditional concept of naming as ujiko all who reside in the ujiko district.

Also in article fourteen it dictates, "The shrine district is a district traditionally determined by each shrine, and shrines must mutually respect ujiko districts." Long ago, the relationship between the shrine and its worship groups and believer groups was a relationship focused on the ujibito (clan member) and the ancestral kami as the ujigami; however, along with that, elements of the chinjugami and the ubusunagami were added and concepts such as ujibito, ubuko (ubusunagami's follower) and ujiko were mixed and came to develop in combination.
- more about ubusuna is below.

Even by the middle of the Muromachi period it was written in (Urabe) Kanekuni Hyakushukashō, "Generally, the Gion Shrine officials call an ujiko someone who is born in the area between the Gojō area to the south and the Nijō area in the north, and call a person from the area north of Nijō up to Ōharaguchi a Mitama ujiko," showing that the clear classification of ujiko districts by city areas had been born. Furthermore, in the farm villages at this time, along with the creation of self-governing villages called gōson, shrines came to be managed as pieces of village property. It is also thought that at this time (hand in hand with the development of the miyaza) the concepts of the ujigami and ujiko came to be firmly established.
In the Meiji period,
the ujiko tradition was taken very serious in the governments shrine policies, and while the ujiko shirabe system from Meiji four (1871) was soon halted due to its being limited to partial enforcement, soon afterward the ujiko sōdai system was installed alongside the administrational institutions for towns and villages in the countryside. In that way, the foundation of present day shrine operations was established. Due to today's Religious Corporation Law (Shūkyō Hōjinhō), the shrine ujiko system has lost its administrative regulations and has turned into something maintained only by practice and belief.
We can also see the phenomenon
that movement of the population; the development of large scale housing areas; the redevelopment of city areas; land reclamation and other types of engineering enterprises; and changes in administrative sectioning, among other things, cause various problems for traditional ujiko districts and the retention of ujiko consciousness.
See sūkeisha , Shrine Parishioner Registration (ujiko shirabe)
source : Sano Kazufumi, Kokugakuin, 2007


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Ujiko Chizu 氏子地図 the Map of Ujiko
(Ujiko means people under the protection of the local deity), which is owned by the shrine, was made in 1631. It shows 14 villages in Ishikawa County and is called "Kashu Ishikawa-no-kohri Utsushi Ezu 加州石川郡写絵図" (Pictures of Ishikawa County, Kashu Prefecture).
The map shows the locations of feudal warriors' residences, temples and shrines, towns, villages, slopes, and bridges, giving an idea of what the castle town of Kanazawa used to look like.

. Ishiura Jinja 石浦神社 . Kanazawa


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. ubusuna 産土 place where I was born, furusato 故郷 .

The place where a baby is born and gets its first clothes (ubugi). There the local gods live (ubusunagami 産土神), who protect the baby. In haiku, it can therefore carry a lot of meaning.

ubugami 産神 "deity of birth"
guardian deity of pregnant women, newborn babies and one's birthplace

Visit to a temple of the God of one's birthplace (ubusunagami - 産土神)
. ubusuna mairi 産土神参 .
kigo for the New Year

. Hōkigami 箒神 Hokigami, Hahakigami - the Broom Deity .
Another version of the Ubugami.


ubusuna ishi うぶすな石 stone for the deity of birth
These stones are offered by pregnant women with the wish to have a safe birth. After the child is born, the stone is given back to the Shrine.

- quote -
Umenomiya Shrine 梅の宮神社 / 梅宮大社 in Kyoto
enshrines Oyamazumi-no-kami, the god who first brewed sake, and his child goddess Konohana-no-sakuyahime-no-mikoto. Nihonshoki, the oldest history book in Japan, records that Oyamazumi-no-kami congratulated Konohana-no-sakuyahime-no-mikoto on her childbirth by brewing sake for her. Therefore, sake brewers worship at the shrine.
Myth tells us that Konohana-no-sakuyahime-no-mikoto gave birth to a god, Hikohohodemi-no-mikoto, the day following her marriage. Thus, Umenomiya Shrine attracts women wishing for an easy delivery.
Matage-ishi (stone) and Ubu-suna (sand)
Matage-ishi and Ubu-suna are famous attractions at Umenomiya Shrine
It is said that a couple will be able to have a baby if they pray to the god for a child and then step over Matage-ishi. Empress Danrin was childless. However, she was able to have the next emperor, Ninmyo, because she stepped over Matage-ishi. Also, when Empress Danrin gave birth, she spread sand from under the main building of Umenomiya Shrine under her bed and gave birth to her son without complications. So, that sand has become known as Ubu-suna and is regarded as a talisman for easy birth. Even now, many couples pay homage at Umenomiya Shrine to pray for a child and for an easy birth.
- source : thekyotoproject.org ... -

- quote
Ubusunagami
The tutelary kami of one's birthplace. Also known as ubusuna. A variety of orthographical representations for the term ubusuna are found historically, including 本居, 生土, 参土, 宇夫須那, and 産須那. In any case, the element ubu means birth, though opinion is divided regarding the significance of suna.
In some locales, the ubusunagami appears related to the ubugami, a tutelary of infants and pregnant women; in these cases, it is customary to pay respects immediately following childbirth at a small shrine (hokora) to the ubusunasama or ubugamisama located within the residential grounds.
While the conceptual basis for ubusunagami originally differed from those for ujigami and chinjugami, the three are frequently confused. Medieval warrior clans strengthened their presence on shōen (manors) by acting as protectors of local villages, and in the process, they adopted as clan tutelaries kami with strong local territorial affiliations, resulting in an amalgamation of the local ubusunagami and clan ujigami. From this period one thus finds historical documents that read both 産神(ubugami) and 氏神(ujigami) as ubusuna.
In the early modern period, the traditional relationship between a clan tutelary (ujigami) and its protégés (ujiko) was mirrored by the custom of using the term ubuko 産子 to refer to the followers of an ubugami.
Finally, based on the etymology of the terms ubusunagami (or ubugami) and ubuko, examples are frequently seen in which the traditional first post-natal shrine visit (hatsumiyamōde) and other ordinary worship at an ujigami shrine are alternately referred to as ubusunamairi (paying worship at the ubusuna).
source : Iwai Hiroshi, Kokugakuin


. Shiba Myoojin Guu 芝神明宮 Shrine Shiba Myojin Gu, Tokyo .
Under the protection of the Edo bakufu government, the shrine thrived, seen as
the Great Protector Deity of the Region, Ubusunagami 大産土神.

. 七ヶ村の産土神 Seven Ubusugami from Ishiura Shrine 石浦神社 .
Kanazawa

in Akita : obosuna sama オボスナ様 / おぼすな様
noogami 農神 / ノウガミ様 - deity for agriculture, especially the rice fields
. Sake 酒 rice wine for rituals and festivals .

yama no kami 山の神 Deity of the Mountain (a female deity)
is also venerated as
o-san no kami お産の神 the deity of birth.
For a difficult delivery, she comes to welcome the dead to the mountain.
Since she dislikes Sanbi, a family where a birth happened is not allowed to enter the mountain for one week.

. sanbi 産火 / 産忌 - - shinibi 死火 / 死忌 fire taboos for birth and death .

. Hi no Kami, Hinokami 火の神 Deity of Fire - Legends .

. San no Kami in Yamagata 山形県 .


. Boshijin, Hahakogami 母子神 "Mother-Child Deity" .


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- - - - -  H A I K U  - - - - -


袴著や八幡宮の氏子だち
hakamagi ya Hachimanguu no ujiko tachi

they come clad in Hakama trousers -
all the parishioners
from Hachimangu


. Masaoka Shiki 正岡子規 visiting shrines and temples .


. Hachiman Shrines .
The Warrior Deity Hachiman 八幡神, deifiction of Emperor Oojin 応神天皇 Ojin,


. Formal trouser-skirt (hakama 袴) .


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いわし雲神も氏子も酒が好き
iwashigumo kami mo ujiko mo sake ga suki

sardine clouds -
the gods and the parishioners
all like sake


Itoo Yoshito 伊藤よしと Ito Yoshito

. sardine clouds, iwashigumo 鰯雲 .


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この宮の我も氏子よ札納
kono miya no ware mo ujiko yo fuda osame

at this shrine
I am one of the parishioners -
bringing back the old amulet


. Abe Midorijo 阿部みどり女 .

. fuda osame 札納 bringing back the old year amulets .


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神の田の水を氏子の田へ落とす
岬雪夫

諏訪明神のわれも氏子よ新酒酌む
矢崎良子

鉄砲洲稲荷の氏子心太突き出し
長谷川かな女


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ujigami 氏神 clan KAMI deities


source : yamauchisekizai.co.jp
New construction of a small ujigami Inari shrine.


- quote
"Clan kami," in ancient Japanese society, an ancestral kami or other tutelary worshiped by individuals sharing the same clan (uji) name. As a result of historical changes in the composition of groups worshiping such kami, however, ujigami today are most frequently identified with local chthonic tutelaries (including both chinjugami and ubusunagami).

As medieval warrior clans strengthened their presence on the local manors known as shōen, they gradually adopted local indigenous tutelaries as their own ujigami, and the people worshiping those ujigami likewise evolved from consanguineous familial organizations to groups linked by the mere sharing of residence in the same geographical area. This process thus resulted in the merging of clan kami (ujigami) and local geographical tutelaries (ubusunagami).

Around the same time, shrines to chinjugami-originally enshrined as the tutelaries of specific buildings or pieces of land-came to be formally dedicated (kanjō) within noble-owned manors as well, leading to a merging of ujigami and chinjugami. Today, ujigami cults can be broadly classified into three types.
The first is the "village ujigami"; in this type, each local resident is considered a "clan member" (ujiko) and participates in worshiping the kami.
The second is called variously yashiki-ujigami or ie-ujigami, a type of kami enshrined in a small shrine (hokora) within the grounds of individual family dwellings.
The final type is referred to as an ikke-ujigami or maki-ujigami, and occupies an intermediate position between the other two types, since it is worshiped by all members of an extended family (ikke) or local neighborhood grouping (maki).
source : Iwai Hiroshi, Kokugakuin 2005

ikke ujigami 一家氏神
maki ujigami まき氏神
yashiki ujigami 屋敷氏神 - . yashikigami 屋敷神 "estate deities" .


. chinjugami 鎮守神 tutelary deities .

. mitamaya 御霊屋 mausoleum .


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氏神の千年杉や初詣
ujigami no sennen sugi ya hatsu moode

the thousand-year old pine
of the ancester deity -
first shrine visit

Tr. Gabi Greve

Mizutani Junichiroo 水谷純一郎 Mizutani Junichiro



氏神の杉に貂住む平家村
ujigami no sugi ni ten sumu heike murs

in the thousand-year old pine
of the ancestor deity there lives a marten -
village of the Heike clan

Tr. Gabi Greve

Nishimura Shigeko 西村しげ子


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氏神と墓と雷鴫の道 成井恵子
氏神の囲ひ済ませて神迎 渡辺セツ
氏神の屋根新しき冬木立 寺田寅彦
氏神の御屋根普請や冬木立 寺田寅彦
氏神の溝より浚ひはじめけり 吉田丁冬
氏神は森に隠れて霜くすべ 廣瀬直人
氏神へ飾納の老夫婦 杉山木川

人住まぬ氏神の木の冬鴉 廣瀬直人
仲秋の月につれだち氏神へ 大庭 光子
注連張つて氏神の杜暗くなる 福田甲子雄
舟子ども海の氏神まつりぞや 古川沛雨亭
藁危で作る氏神初御空 高久田みのる

source : HAIKUreikuDB


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笛吹きて鳶も産土神迎へけり
fue fukite tobi mo ubugami mukae-keri

whistling loud
even this Tombi welcomes
the birthplace gods


Nohara Shunroo 野原春醪 Nohara Shunro

. WKD : tobi 鳶 Tobi, Tombi - black kite .

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冬田打つ産土神に見守られ
fuyuta utsu ubusunagami ni mimorarete

preparing the winter fields
we are protected
by the birthplace gods . . .


Tanaka Masako 田中政子


. WKD : tauchi 田打ち preparing the fields .
lit. "hitting the fields"

産土神に土俵組みゐる八朔盆 香川はじめ
産土神に灯あがれる若葉かな 芝不器男
産土神に焚く田遊びのはじめの火 佐野美智
産土神に秋繭供へ遠野人 平山節子
産土神に隣れる家の大種井 波多野爽波
産土神に雀の遊ぶ年の内 丸岡宣子
産土神に露けき老のひと屯ろ 石田勝彦 秋興
産土神に頬被解く田植道 阿波野青畝
産土神の上蠍座の夜の秋 町田しげき
産土神の森に逃げ込む稲雀 根岸すみ子
産土神の椎は日向のお元日 太田鴻村 穂国
産土神の留守やわがもの顔に猫 杉本寛
産土神の茅の輪大きく楕円なり 中尾杏子
産土神の針金細工子かまきり 合田秀渓
産土神は大河のほとり初明り 老川敏彦
産土神へ懸けしばかりの菜もありぬ 田中裕明
産土神へ搗きたて餅や年の夜 島田教夫
産土神を村の高みに秋気澄む 川勝 ミヨ
産土神を良き座に秋の島歌舞伎 宮津昭彦
source : HAIKUreikuDB


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. Legends about the Clan and Family Deities .

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