Showing posts with label akiba daigongen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label akiba daigongen. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Coming Down the Mountain Temples 47 & 48 Shodoshima Pilgrimage

 


After leaving Renge-ji, temple 44 on the pilgrimage, my way was now pleasantly downhill as the sun got lower in the sky on day 4 of my walk around the island of Shodoshima on its smaller version of the 88 temple Shikoku Pilgrimage connected with Kobo Daishi.


It's a wide path down the mountainside and glimpses of the Nakayama Rice Terraces can be caught.


After a while the entrance to a small cave comes into view.


This is temple number 47, Togano o san.


It is not a big cave, and at the back is the small structure housing the honzon, and Eleven-faced Kannon.


It is said that Gyoki spent time in the cave. He was the legendary monk that is said to have  founded many of the temples on Shikoku a full century before Kobo daishi's time.


Near the cave entrance are several more small "halls" enshrining Amida, Kobo Daishi, and Akiba Daigongen.


A little further down hill and temple 48 comes into view, Bishamon-do.


A benefactor recently paid to have the Bishamoin statue renovated and a new building built.


From here the Giant Kannon can be seen across the valley. I will be visiting it tomorrow.


I didnt notic them myself, but there are wooden statues of the Three Wise Monkeys, evidence that the Koshin cult was strong in the area. Koshin was in essence a Taoist cult but now Koshin sites have been turned into Shinto or Buddhist sites.


The previous post was on Renge-ji, temple number 44 .


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Saturday, October 31, 2020

Ghost Temple Eikoku-ji



Eikoku-ji temple in Hitoyoshi is located on the opposite bank of the Kuma River to the Aoi Aso Shrine, near the castle. It is also known as Yureidera, literally "Ghost Temple". The temple is a Soto Zen temple and ws founded in 1408 by a monk named Jittei.


He saw a ghost rising from the temple pond and a scroll painting he did of the ghost is still in the temple's possession. The temple is also famous for having been used as a headquarters by Saigo Takamori during the Satsuma Rebellion of the late 19th Century.


The principal statues in the main hall are of Shakyamuni, Monju, and Fugen.


Following Saigo's month long stay here in 1877, the fighting that took place resulted in the temples burning down, It was rebuilt in 1891.


I am fairly sure this statue is of Akiba Daigongen, with flames, fangs, and the rope being associated with Fudo Myo, The beak and wings with Crow Tengu, and standing on a fox. Similar to Izuna Gongen, though there is also a Doryo Daigongen another similar deity that has a Soto connection.