Wednesday, September 24, 2025

A Night On Miyajima

 


From Daisho-in Temple the views down onto Itsukushima Shrine and its iconic torii are quite impressive.


Daisho-in administered  Itsukushima Shrine until 1868, and it was, like most religious sites in Japan at the time both Buddhist and "shinto" hence the pagoda....


It was getting late and my plan was tp sleep out in a park on the back-side of the island.


I didnt go into the shrine..... too expensive, too many visitors, and having been there several times before, not much to see....







Said to be the biggest rice-spoon, shamoji, in the world...


Miyajima has numerous shrines on the shoreline, and originally all of them were only visited by boat, no-one lived on the island



Now there is a road on a small section of the coast of Miyajima, but still some of the shrines can only be reached by boat.


On the back side of the island, there are lots of oyster farms.


My room for the night was a bench in a small park. The previous post was on Daishoin Temple.


Monday, September 22, 2025

Myoo-in Temple 9 Shikoku Fudo Myoo Pilgimage

 


Fudo has 36 young boy attendants, and is often depicted paired with two named Kongara and Seitaka.


At the 36 temples of the Shikoku Fudo Myoo Pilgrimage, each temple has one of the 36 usually, like here, as a small statue.


Myoo-in is located a few kilometers up the Kawata River from the Yoshino River, a little over halfway from Miyoshi to Tokushima City.


I can not find a lot of history or background information. 


The main hall is fairly new, replacing one from the last years of the Edo Period.


There is this group of new Six Jizo, and somewhere here is enshrined an older said to be carved by Kobo Daishi himself.


In the Daishi-do there was a small Aizen-Myoo in front of the Daishi statue.


Up the steps was this unusually two-storeyed structure.


It may be a kind of pagoda.


Built in 1574, some sources say it enshrined a Fudo Myoo and a Bishamonten.


Through a narrow slit I am guessing this is a Bishamonten


For me, the most interesting was in the Enma-do...


Great King Enma is the head of the 13 judges of hell who decide where you go after death, specifically which of the numerous "hells


Statues of the other 12 judges flank him here.


In Chinese Buddhism there are only a total of ten judges.


Enma derives from the Hindu deity Yama.


In Japan he is depicted in the dress of a Tang China government official.


I was here on Christmas Eve 2016, day 6 of my walk along the Shikoku Fudo Myoo Pilgrimage.


The previous post was on the nearby Kawada Hachiman Shrine.

Saturday, September 20, 2025

Daishoin Temple 14 Chugoku Pilgrimage Part 2 Jizo, Kannon, Enma, Autumn Colours

 


This is the second part of my post on Daishoin Temple on Miyajima. The previous post is here.


Not sure exactly who this is but I suspect it is one of the Wisdom Kings.....


I believe this is a Kokuzo Bosatsu statue in what is called the Nyo Garden,,,,



The Hensho Kutsu is an artificial cave with an impressive ceiling of lanterns.


Here are 88 statues and a small amount of earth from each of the 88 temple on the Shikoku Pilgrimage.


There are many, many versions of Jizo here.....


The Amida-do enshrining an Amida trinity.


For more details on the history of Daishoin please check my previous post....








A tengu......


Some miniature Jizo....


Enma..... the Judge of "Hell"....


yet anither Fudo....


Theer are numerous Kannons here, including the one that was the main Buddha of Itsukushima Shrine until the separation of Buddhas and kami in 1868