Thursday, July 16, 2026

Kannonji Temple 69 Shikoku Ohenro Pilgrimage

 


Kannonji, temple 69, and Jinneiin, temple 68, both occupy the same site, but I came into the kannonji side first so it gets posted before 68.


The reason I came into Kannonji first was that I visited the original "temple" 68, which was the Hachiman shrine on the hilltop.


From the hilltop is the viewpoint overlooking the Zenigata Sunae, a huge sand sculpture.


The shrine was founded in the very first years of the 8th century by a monk practising austerities on the hill and seeing a vision on the sea and established the Kotohiki Hachiman Shrine.


The temple was founded as the shrines temple and was named Jinguji Hokoin.


Later Gyoki visited, and then later still Kobo Daishi and he painted an Amida Nyorai and made it the honzon of the shrine. He built several halls and statues at the temple and renamed it Kannonji.


When the government forcibly separated the Buddhas & Kami in 1868, the Amida was brought from the Hachimen Shrine and placed in Kannonji. The shrine ceased to be number 68, and the part of Kannonji holding the Amida became temple 68 and as renamed Jinnein.


The honzon of Kannonji, a Kannon, is a secret Buddha, but recently has started to be shown once every ten years.


As well as the main hall, built in 1677, and Daishi Hall, Kannonji also has an Aizen hall, a Heart Sutra Hall, a Kaizan Hall, a Dainichi Hall, and a Kyozuka Hall.


The main hall is an Important Cultural Property, and in the Treasure Hall are two more: a wooden reclining Buddha dating to the Fujiwara Period, and a silk painting of Fudo Myoo





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