After leaving Kushiro, the old San-in Do is a narrow, single-lane road that runs near the rail line and comes into the back of Hashi completely avoiding the new and busy Route 9
Home to a pretty good "Oceanarium", the beach is part of the Iwami Seaside Park and is very popular in summer.
At the far end of the beach is the tiny harbour for Hashi.
On the hillside up above the harbour is Tsuto Shrine.
This is the main shrine for the town, although just over a hundred years ago an Otoshi Shrine and an Inari Shrine were merged with it. It is yet another local shrine listed in the Engi Shiki.
It is believed that the ruling clan, an offshoot of the clan that colonized the Iwami coastal region in ancient times established a shrine to their ancestors here. Their ancestral deity was Komemochitsuki, and in some way he is connected with mochi rice cakes. They are connected to the clan who founded
Kushiro Shrine, and the
shrines down near Masuda.
This seems to be the eastern limit of their territory. They were obviously placed here by the Yamato as a check on the power of Izumo. Further East and into Izumo it seems the Mononobe were the clan sent for the same purpose.
In 889 the clan enshrined Tagorihime, the elder of the three Munakata, daughters of Susano.
A myth/legend has it that as a young girl Tagorihime was too volatile even for Susano, so she was sent away and came ashore on Hashi Beach. A local couple raised here as their own. She never spoke.
Later, a signal fire lit to warn of an attack on Izumo by a "foreign" enemy, caused Tagorihime to reveal her true identity and a dream of Susano that if Tagorihime returned, Izumo would be successful in defeating the enemy. Tagorihime set off but her foster parents chased after her to stop her. She hid behind a rock at what is now a shrine in Gotsu. Her fraught foster parents passed by her and died on the slopes of Asari Fujisan, a coastal mountain near my place. Tagorihime reached Izumo and the enemy was defeated.
The oldest version of this story dates to the 15th century at Hinomisaki Shrine, though it is probably much older. It is said that this shrine and the one in Gotsu where the rock is were both territories of Hinomisaki Shrine.
Around the main shrine building are an Ebisu Shrine, a Konpira Shrine, a Yasaka Shrine, and a Tenmangu Shrine. The small shrine slightly above the main shrine is believed to enshrine Komemochizuki.
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