Showing posts with label Fudo Myojin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fudo Myojin. Show all posts

Sunday, April 21, 2024

Hoko-in Temple 70 Kyushu pilgrimage

 


A statue of Kobo Daishi, the focus of the Kyushu 108 sacred sites pilgrimage, stands outside temple 70, Hoko-in near Arita in Saga.


I reached it on day 70 of my walk along the pilgrimage, a curious coincidence.


A large Bokefuji Kannon statue stands in the grounds. An increasingly popular form of Kannon, prayed to for protection against dementia and senility.


The honzon is a "secret" 11-faced Kannon, and the temple is also part of the Kyushu Kannon pilgrimage.


The temple was founded in the early Edo period when a monk came down from nearby Mount Kurokami.,A shugendo center, and home to temple 69 which I will be visiting tomorrow.


With the ban on Shuigendo in the early Meiji period the temple fell into disuse and disrepair, but was revived in 1968. The Daishi statue in the Daishi Hall was brought from another Shugendo mountain temple, underscoring the historical connection to Yamabushi.


The temple unusually has a Mizuko hall as well as the main hall and Daishi hall.


This was to be the only temple of the day for me as I spent the rest of the day as a tourist exploring Arita.


The previous temple was number 79 Zenpukuji.


Friday, April 12, 2024

Zenpukuji Temple 79 Kyushu pilgrimage

 


Zenukuji Temple is located in Imafuku, now part of Matsuubara City. It is the only Shingon temple in Imafuku and the only temple I visited on day 69 of my walk around Kyushu.


The temple has strong links with the Matsuura Clan after whom the city is named. The temple was established in 1335 as a Betto of Imamiya Shrine. 


The Imamiya Shrine enshrined the founder of the Matsuura Clan, and the temple was established as a place for the Buddhist priests who performed rituals at the shrine. . In the 17th century, the temple was moved to its current site from further inland.


The ceiling of the main hall had some beautiful ceiling paintings.


The honzon of the temple is a standing Amida Nyorai.


The main gate was relocated from a Tenmangu Shrine.


I arrived from the "back" way from the other side of the hill and through the neighbouring shrine.  88 statues with red bibs stood along the path.


At the base of the stairs running up to the main gate is an eclectic collection of small statues.


Sunday, March 24, 2024

Saikyoji Temple 77 Kyushu pilgrimage

 


Saikyoji Temple is located on a hillside overlooking the harbour of the main settlement on Hirado Island.


It is built on the site of where Kobo Daishi performed his first Goma ceremony after returning from China in 806.


It is a Shingon temple and because of its size is sometimes referred to as the Koyasan of the West, although it must be said I have come across numerous other temples with the same nickname.


It was established in 1607 by the local daimyo Shigenobu Matsuura, who was a fervent believer in Shingon. However, at that time a zen temple existed on the property.


The zen priest refused to leave and so Matsuura burned down the temple with the priest inside. For years Matsuura was haunted by ghosts of the murdered riests until one day they were scared away by the sound of a baby crying. This is said to be the origin of the "Crying Baby Sumo" event held every February at Setsubun. Most Naki Sumo events are held in shrines in May.


The honzon is a statue of Kokuzo Bodhisattva, not one of the more famous bodhisattvas, but important to Kobo Daishi. Kokuzo was the focus of the ascetic practices that Kobo Daishi undertook as a youth.


Within the grounds are an Ebisu Shrine and an Inari Shrine.


Between the main temple and the Okunoin, the path is lined with 88 statues representing the Shikoku pilgrimage.


The temple was well supported by the Matsuura clan and the temples Treasure House museum has many delightful paintings and statues, unfortunately some of which were looted from Korea during Hideyoshis invasions.


The temple is number 77 on the Kyushu pilgrimage and also on the Kyushu Kannon pilgrimage.


Number 78 on the Kyushu pilgrimage is a few kilometers away and is the site where Kobo Daishi set sail on his journey to China. It is an unmanned site so pilgrimage stamps need to be gotten here.


Hirado is an interesting place with a lot of historical connections. William Adams, the English sailor immortalized in the novel Shogun, is currently attracting a lot of interest because of the new remake of the TV drama.


He lived and died in Hirado.


The previous post was on the pagoda at the okunoin of the temple.


Hirado is well worth a visit if you are in the area, and Saikyoji is well worth a visit if you are in Hirado.


Thursday, March 21, 2024

Saikyoji Temple Pagoda

 

When it was constructed, in 1989, the 3-storey pagoda at Saikyoji Temle on Hirado was probably the biggest 3-storey pagoda in Jaan, although larger ones have been built since then.


It is at the okunoin of the temple, overlooking the sheltered harbour and castle of Hirado, once a very important port for international trade before the country was closed down to most trade in the 17th century.


The okunoin is where Kobo Daishi performed his first Goma ceremony after returning from China in 806.


Hirado was also where he left for China a few years earlier and I would be visiting that site next.


Saikyoji is temple 77 on the Kyushu pilgrimage, and the main temple has lots to see so I will be covering that in the next post.


The pagoda stands 33.5 meters tall. On the first floor is an altar to Fudo Myo, and a Fudo statue also stands in front of the pagoda.


From the top floor there are great views over the town, castle, and harbour.


The previous post in this series on day 68 of my walk around Kyushu was on the Tabira Catholic Church on the mainland just across the bridge from Hirado.


Friday, March 15, 2024

Ohashi Natural Bridge

 


If you follow the path up behind Ohashi Kannonji Temple you arrive at the Ohashi itself.


Formed when the roof of a cave collapsed, the natural bridge is about 30 meters long and about 4 meters wide and is split into two sections for most of it.


Scattered around the cliffs underneath it are numerous statues, the biggest being a Fudo Myo.


The community of ferns growing here is quite unusual and is registered as a National Natural Monument.


The natural bridge was one of the historic Hirado Hakkei, the "eight scenic views of Hirado Domain"


Unlike the American Southwest where the natural bridges and arches can be seen dramatically, here in Japan the dense vegetation makes them less than  impressive, but the biggest one in Japan, Onbashi in Hiroshima, is actually quite impressive.


The previous post in this series on day 68 of my walk around Kyushu was on the Ohashi Kannon Temple.