Showing posts with label henro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label henro. Show all posts

Thursday, November 30, 2023

Ishiteji Temple Part 3

 


In this third part to my post on Ishiteji Temple in Matsuyama, I show scenes from inside the Okunoin and then the second tunnel leading back to the main temple.


In PART 1 I looked at the entrance to the temple and some of the main buildings and also gave plenty of historical details.


In PART 2 I looked at the tunnel leading through the hillside and the approach to this Okunoin.


The inside of the unusual, spherical, okunoin is filled with many of the same kind of "folk" statues that were encountered in the tunnel.


The majority seem to represent the rakan, the 500 disciples of the Buddha that are often found as a group of statues at some temples.


There were other statues though, representing other bodhisattvas, buddhas, deities, etc


There seems to be quite an atmosphere of strangeness that some visitors seem to have found disturbing


I found it quite wonderful, like a huge, free, sculpture museum....


Leaving the Okunoin, I took a different tunnel back to the main temple


This had the same kinds of statues as the first tunnel, including many "standard" ones


As well as another chapel-altar covered in bibs


There were also paintings on some walls 







Before emerging once again into the sunlight in the main temple compound....


Tuesday, November 28, 2023

Ishiteji Temple Part 2

 


Through the tunnel to the Okunoin


This is the second part of four on Ishiteji Temple in Matsuyama, Ehime.


It is the 51st temple on the Ohenro Shikoku Pilgrimage but is also very popular with non-pilgrims.


There are two tunnels that lead from the main temple, through the hillside, to emerge in a small valley behind the temple where the Okunoin, the inner temple, is located.


The tunnels have no lighting at all, so you need to take flashlights with you.


What you will encounter are some fairly standard jizo statues,....


But, a lot of very crude, wooden statues.....


I did hear one time that the carver of these statues was a relative of the head priest, however there are dozens and dozens of them throughout the temple, if not hundreds...


I took so many photos of these weird statues, which is why this post on Ishiteji is so big and spread over multiple parts.


There are a couple of "chapels" or altars along the way....


before the tunnel emerges into daylight and an imposing statue of Enma, king of Hell


There are also a series of other crude statues, some type of cement of plaster over a chicken wire frame....


These are already starting to deteriorate....


A huge, almost spherical, golden structure appears.....


This is the Okunoin, guarded by golden komainu.....


but thats for the next post....


Just outside the Okunoin was this skeletal statue of the historicalBuddha fasting.....


Friday, November 24, 2023

Ishiteji Temple Part 1

 


Ishite-ji Temple is number 51 on the 88 temple Shikoku Pilgrimage known as Ohenro.


It is located near Dogo Onsen in Matsuyama City and is very popular with non-pilgrims as well as pilgrims.


My dilemma when it came time for this post was in how to choose from the almost 200 photos I took here, and decided to post about half of them but spread over 4 posts to make them manageable.


The temple was said to be founded by Gyoki in 728.


Later Kukai visited and changed it to be a Shingon temple.


At that time it was called Anyo-ji.


The Niomon, dating all the way back to 1318, is a National Treasure.


The honzon of Ishiteji is a Yakushi Nyorai.


The three-storey Pagoda is about the same age as the Niomon, and it is an Important Cultural Property.


Ishite-ji literally means "stone hand temple" and refers to the legend of Emon Saburo.


His story can be found in the post on Monjuin Temple that I had visited earlier in the day.


A small stone with an inscription is viewable in the temple treasure house is said to be the one found in the hand of the new-born baby.


The belfry, 3 photos above, also dates back to the early 14th century, though the bell is said to be a little older.


Many temples are quite, sedate, meditative places, conforming to a certain image of Buddhist temples.


Some, however, are noisy, colourful, and crowded, and Ishiteji is one of this katter kind.


There are numerous smaller halls and shrines scattered around, and an unusually large number of statues and paintings.


Part of the reason I took so many pictures was that the light was great, but also there werejust so many statues, many of which, in the upcoming posts, are most unusual




The previous temple was Hanta-ji Temple, number 50.


Next part click below