I begin day 38 of my Chugoku Kannon Pilgrimage walk at Tada-ji Temple on the mountain top overlooking Shimoko. It is temple 22 of the pilgrimage.
It has been 7 days since the last temple of the pilgrimage,
the Tamae Kannon-in down in Hagi.
Tada-ji is also the 24th temple of the Iwami Kannon Pilgrimage which I have been concurrently walking along since yesterday.
The Nio of Tada-ji are truly impressive....
Each is carved from a single piece of camphorwood. I am unable to find a date but they seem quite recent.
The name Tada is unique among Japanese temples, apparently.
It was founded in 806 by a monk who had travelled to China with Kobo Daishi to study.
He returned two years earlier than Kobo Daishi, and while passing through this area had an experience which caused him to establish a temple here around a tiny statue he brought back from China.
The honzon of the temple is a 11-faced Kannon. It is a secret Buddha revealed once a year at the Hatsuumasai Festival.
That takes place on the Day of the Horse, on the second month of the lunar calendar, the festival day of Dakini Ten, a deity on the head of the Kannon statue.
Dakiniten later became equated with Inari, but was originally a set of female demons/goddesses connected with death.
This is one of the three major festivals of Iwami, and unfortunately, I have yet to attend.
At the small Inari Shrine (was it Dakiniten before Shinbutsununri?) there is a viewpoint looking out at the Japan Sea.
Around the Kobo Daishi statue at the base ( top photo of the post) is a miniature 88 temple pilgrimage about ten meters long.
There are two huge, ancient trees in the grounds, a camphor tree said to be over 1,000 years old, and a Cypress said to be over 1100 years old.
There is a Kumano Shrine in the grounds connected to another experience by Ryusei Shonin, the founder.
Tada-ji is believed to be the oldest extant temple in Hamada.
Perhaps the most intriguing sights at Tadaji are to be found inside the main hall, and that I will cover in the next post in the series...
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