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

Thursday, February 29, 2024

Tsurugake Kannon Saifukuji Temple 76 Kyushu pilgrimage

 


Saifukuji Temple, number 76 on the Kyushu Pilgrimage, is located on a mountainside overlooking the Sasa River north of Sasebo, Nagasaki.


The road up to the temple was a long gentle slope, for which I was grateful. The biggest building was a very large, modern house, I'm guessing the priest's residence.


A small main hall had a statue of Kobo Daishi standing outside it.


There were rows of Mizuko Jizo lining the approach.


The most interesting thing was the okunoin of the temple, a cave in the cliff behind the main hall.


It is said that the cave had been used by yamabushi, mountain ascetics, since the Heian Period.


It is actually not really a cave anymore as the ceiling has collapsed, leaving a stone bridge, or arch.


There were many small altars within the okunoin, and, not surprisingly,  a predominance of Fudo statues.


The temple itself is actually not so old, being founded in the late Meiji Period, but its origins go back a bit further.


At the end of the 16th century was the Warring States Period was coming to a close, a battle took place here between two rival clans.


In the late 18th century the Hirado Lord laced 5 statues on the mountain, including a Kannon, as a prayer memorial to the samurai who had died. Over time the statues were forgotten and buried by landslides.


In 1894, a local man, a devout worshipper of Kannon, became mortally ill and had a vision showing where the statues were buried. His family dug in the spot and found the statues, including the Eleven-Faced Kannon which is the honzon of Saifukuji. The man was miraculously healed and the Kannon has become famous ever since.


The previous post was on the Sechibaru Coal Mine Museum at the foot of the mountain.


Wednesday, February 14, 2024

Great Fudo at Saikoji Temple

 


This Daifudoson statue is located at Totakesan Saiko-ji Temple in the high country north of Sasebo, Nagasaki.

It is actually located in its own car parking area across the road from the temple grounds as it is known for traffic safety due to the inscription which says "Turn great hardships into small hardships, and small hardships into safety".

Saikoji is a Shingon temple and is number 73 on the Kyushu pilgrimage.


On the altar underneath the statue are several more, smaller Fudo statues.


I have been unable to find out any details about the statue.....I will post more on Saikoji next....


The previous post in this series was on Norito Shrine.






Tuesday, February 6, 2024

Tozenji Temple 74 on the Kyushu pilgrimage

 


Tozenji Temple, number 74 on the Shingon Kyushu pilgrimage, is in Nakazatacho, a rural community north of Sasebo in Nagasaki.


On the previous day's walk I visited temple 66, also called Tozenji, to the east of Sasebo.


The temple was established here in 968, but its origin can be said to lie almost three hundred years earlier in tye very early 8th century when the famous mink Gyoki visited the area and carved a statue of yakushi Nyorai.


That statue was enshrined on top of the mountain in what is now the temples Okunoin and the statue is the honzon of the temple.


I visited very early in the morning and there was no one about so I didn't go inside and see the statue.


The temple grounds are dominated by a huge Camphor tree.


Thought to be 600 years old, this ancient tree has a trunk circumference of 8 meters and is twenty meters high.


The previous post was about the first temple I visited on this, the 67th day of my walk, Korin-in.


Sunday, February 4, 2024

Korin-in Temple 72 on the Kyushu pilgrimage

 


Korin-in is, like the previous pilgrimage temple I visited the evening before, Daiichi-in, an urban temple mostly built in concrete.


It is also a relatively new temple, being founded in 1896, at a time when Sasebo was growing rapidly as a naval base.


The one wooden building is a Bishamon-do enshrining Bishamonten.


The honzon is an Amida. Also enshrined in the main hall is a Gyoran Kannon, a not-so-common form of Kannon, as well as the obligatory Kobo Daishi, Aizen Myo, Fudo Myo, and a Jizo.


Outside are a couple of Fudo statues including quite a large one.


I visited at the start of day 67 of my walk around the Kyushu pilgrimage. The previous post was my diary for day 66 which includes links to the three pilgrimage temples I visited that day.


Saturday, January 27, 2024

The Art of Taisanji Temple

 


Like most of the temples on major pilgrimages, Taisanji, temple 52 on the Shikoku pilgrimage has plenty of art adorning the buildings and grounds.


The Nio Gate is about 600 meters from the temple grounds. Rebuilt in 1305,at  the same time as the main hall, it contains 2 striking Nio guardians.


At the next gate, at the entrance to the main temple complex, there are 4 statues of the Shitenno, the four heavenly kings.


It is not uncommon to find temple gates with the four shitenno


Inside the bell tower are paintings depicting Enma and the other judges of hell and scenes of the tortures and sufferings awaiting those going to hell...


Ema, votive plaques, are a religious practice common to both shrines and temples. There were a variety of different designs at Taisanji, but I was attracted to theFudo.....


traces of pigment can still be seen in this example of relief carving....


Not sure who this statue is, but to my untrained eye it seems to be almost an Indian-style statue...


Small statues of Daikoku, one of the Seven Lucky Gods, can often be found at the ends of roof ridges, or, like here, on a wall toed with kawara.


To me, this final statue aears to be done in Korean style.


Friday, January 19, 2024

Fukuishi Kannon Seiganji Temple

 


Fukuishi Kannon is the popular name for Seiganji Temple in Sasebo, Nagasaki.


It's origin lies with a visit by Gyoki to the area in 710. While here he carved 3 statues from a sacred tree, one of which, a two metre tall 11-faced Kannon, he enshrined here.


It is classed as one of the Seven Famous Kannon statues in Kyushu.


When Kobo Daishi visited the area about a century later he established Seiganji Temple.


It is also said he placed 500 rakan statues in the cave behind the temple.


Rather than a cave, it is actually a wide, curved overhang in the cliff.


Over the centuries many of the statues disappeared but there still remains a collection of assorted statues, many not rakan, in the cave.


The current main hall was built by the local lord, Matsuura Seizan, in 1785,


He became Daimyo of the Hirado Domain when only 16 and later became a renowned swordsman.


It is a Shingon temple and the honzon is the Gyoki Kannon.


Held in August, the Sennichi Festival is one of the major festivals of Sasebo.


It is claimed that coming here and praying here for just one day during the festival is the equivalent to praying for 46,000 days, hence the name of the festival Shiman Rokusen Nichi, which means 46,000 days.


I visited on day 66 of my walk along the Kyushu Shingon pilgrimage, although the temple itself is not part of the pilgrimage. The previous post in the series was Jozenji Temple.