Areas: Dai (台) and Kobukuroya (小袋谷)
Place Name The word "dai" means "a
plateau or tableland." In ancient times when people made their homes so as
to live in safety, one of their ideal places was a tableland with a
mountain or hill behind and the sea or a river in front. The Dai area was
once such a place, with hills behind and a river running at the
foot. The character 岱, pronounced "dai," was
often used for such a place. This custom held good here, but over the
years the character was replaced by "台," which has the same pronunciation
and a similar meaning. It is presumed that the character was already in
use prior to the Eiroku era (永禄, 1558-70), because it has been found in a
document from that era. In olden days, the
"Kobukuro" in Kobukoroya was written "巨福礼" or "小福礼." However, the present
characters, "小袋," were already being used in the Warring States period
(1467-1590).
Full name: Seitaisan (西台山)
Koshoji Denomination: Ji sect (時宗) Location:
To reach Koshoji Temple, walk north some 400 meters from
Kita-Kamakura Station, and turn to the left immediately after the Osaka
Post Office (小坂郵便局) on the left hand side. Another 150-meter walk will
bring you to the temple, on raised ground to the right.
History: The temple was founded by Ikko. This
priest was a disciple of Ippen (一遍, 1239-89), who initiated the Ji sect
(時宗), a form of Pure Land Buddhism. Ippen's teachings were based on the
concept of tariki (他力), literally, "the power of the other—Amida," which
means rebirth in the Pure Land through complete reliance on the grace of
Amida. While Honen and Shinran (親鸞,1173-1262),
the founders of the Jodo sect (浄土宗, the Pure Land sect) and the Jodo Shin
sect (浄土真宗, the True Pure Land sect), respectively, believed that Amida
was the absolute being far above human beings, Ippen taught that Buddha
and human beings were one. Ippen and his followers wandered about the
country exhorting people to recite the nembutsu (念仏), the repeated
chanting of "Namu Amidabutsu (南無阿弥陀仏)." Soon, wherever Ippen went,
enthusiastic followers there began to perform an ecstatic nembutsu dance.
Yugyoji Temple (遊行寺) in Fujisawa is the head temple of the Ji
sect. Another story says that the temple was
built to commemorate the place where Ippen stayed one night after he tried
to enter Kamakura and was rejected by government officials.
Grounds: At the top of the stone steps is
the Sammon Gate (山門), popularly called Kurusumon (くるす門). The gate is
unusual in that it has a crest with a stylized cross within a
circle. The temple has no connection with
Christianity, as only the gate itself was transferred here in the early
Meiji period (1867-1912). The crest, however, along with two candlesticks
in the Main Hall that were used by Christians, attest to the presence of
Christians in the area during the Edo period (1603-1867).
A Jizo statue, called Kosodate Jizo
(子育て地蔵), literally, "Child-Rearing Jizo" stands to the right in front of
the gate. It is popular among the local residents because it is believed
that any kind of prayer for one's children is sure to be answered. Behind
the gate and to the left is a small stone shrine, called Oshabuki
(おしゃぶき).
People here believe that daily
visits to the shrine will cure them of a chronic cough. The Main Hall
houses many Buddhist statues: Amida Nyorai (阿弥陀如来), probably made before
1429 because the time of the repair work was recorded; two attendants,
Kannon Bosatsu (観音菩薩) and Seishi Bosatsu (勢至菩薩), made in the Muromachi
period (1336-1573); Shaka Nyorai (釈迦如来), transferred from Tokeiin (東渓院);
Higiri Jizo (日限地蔵), "Time-Limiting Jizo," made in the Muromachi period; a
seated Yakushi Nyorai (薬師如来); and a standing statue of Ikko
(一向).
In front of the
Main Hall is an itabi-type (板碑) stone monument 60 centimeters high. It
bears the inscription 正中二年 (corresponding to 1325) and a Sanskrit
character that symbolizes three Buddhas: Amida Nyorai, Kannon Bosatsu and
Seishi Bosatsu. It is very old and precious for a monument of this kind in
Kanagawa Prefecture.
Full name: Kikkosan (亀甲山)
Jofukuji Denomination: Tendai sect (天台宗) Location:
The temple, situated some 800 meters north from Kita-Kamakura
Station, is just beyond the Yokosuka Line railroad crossing to the right,
and is some 150 meters north of the Suisekibashi Bridge (水堰橋), which spans
the Kobukuroya-gawa River (小袋谷川). History: The
founder was a priest called Jobutsu (成仏). Temple records reveal he was the
son of Hojo Yasutoki (北条泰時, 1183-1242), the third regent, and had studied
Buddhism from boyhood. When he became a monk and took the name Yasutsugu
Nyudo (泰次入道), he would practice asceticism in a cave called Kame no Iwaya
(亀の窟) in the hill back of the temple.
It so happened that it was during this time his
father, Yasutoki, invited some celebrated priests to study sutras at
Tsurugaoka Hachimangu Shrine. (In olden days Buddhism and Shintoism
coexisted within the same precincts.) Among them was Shinran, the priest
who founded the Jodo Shin sect, the "True Pure
Land." Yasutsugu Nyudo asked Shinran for
instruction and Shinran himself visited here on his way to Hachimangu.
Yasutsugu thus became a disciple of Shinran and was given a new name,
Jobutsu. In 1232, he converted the temple to one of the Jodo Shin
sect.
Grounds: The Main Hall houses several
statues: Amida Nyorai, and Shotoku Taishi (聖徳太子, 574-622). Paintings of
Shinran and Rennyo (蓮如, 1415-99) are also seen there. In the Kuri,
priest's living quarters, is a one-meter-high wooden statue of Kokuzo
Bosatsu (虚空蔵菩薩). A large juniper two meters in
circumference stands in the courtyard. The cave, Kame no Iwaya, where
Yasutsugu Nyudo practiced asceticism, still remains in the hillside.
Itsukushima Jinja Shrine (厳島神社)
| Dedicated Deities: Emperor
Ojin (応神天皇), Tachibana Hime no Mikoto (橘姫命), and Ichikishima Hime no
Mikoto (市杵島姫命), and is the guardian deity of this
area. Location: Itsukushima Jinja Shrine is located
on a hillside called Kamenokoyama (亀甲山), behind Jofukuji Temple.
Grounds: At the foot of the torii
(鳥居) gate on the way to the shrine is a koshinto-type (庚申塔) stone
monument, engraved with three monkeys, one covering its eyes, another its
ears and the third its mouth, to symbolize the old teaching: "See no evil,
hear no evil, speak no evil." The inscription reads 寛文十年 (corresponding to
1670), marking the monument one of the oldest in Kamakura.
Hachiman Jinja Shrine (八幡神社)
|
Location & Grounds: The
shrine is on the hillside between Jofukuji Temple and Kita-Kamakura
Station. It is popularly called Ko-Hachiman, literally, "Minor Hachiman,"
by the local inhabitants. On the right halfway
up the stone stairway leading to the shrine are koshinto-type stone
monuments. One is engraved with three monkeys, and another with Shomen
Kongo (青面金剛), literally, "Blue-Faced Kongo," who is depicted as a
demon-like figure with a fierce-looking blue face, hair standing on end,
and four or six arms. It protects the faith from evil effects.
Areas: Iwase (岩瀬) and Imaizumi (今泉)
Place Name The name Iwase is said
to derive from the surname of Iwase Yoichitaro (岩瀬与一太郎), a warrior in the
Kamakura period (1185/92-1333). When Minamoto no Yoritomo
(源頼朝, 1147-1199) attacked the Satake (佐竹) in Hitachi (常陸, present-day
Ibaraki Prefecture), he captured some of their vassals. One, Iwase
Yoichitaro, strongly protested to Yoritomo, saying, "The Minamoto and
Satake are relatives. Why do you try to destroy us?" In consideration of
his courage, Yoritomo pardoned him and made him a vassal. Later, Iwase
Yoichiro took up residence in this area.
The name Imaizumi, literally, "Newly Created Spring," derives from
a legend associated with a spring that Kobo Daishi (弘法大師, 774-835), a
celebrated priest in the eighth- and ninth-centuries, allegedly created by
praying to Fudo Myoo (不動明王) when the local people were in dire need of
water.
Full name: Kikyozan (亀鏡山)
Daichoji Denomination: Jodo sect (浄土宗) Location:
To reach Daichoji Temple you must walk along the prefectural
road in front of Kamakura Joshi Daigaku (鎌倉女子大学), Kamakura Women's
College, some 400 meters toward Kita-Kamakura. From there, you will see a
lane leading off to the left. At its end is
Daichoji.
History: The temple was
founded in 1546 by Hojo Tsunashige (北条綱成, 1515-87), the adopted son of
Hojo Ujitsuna (北条氏綱, 1486-1541), the second castle lord of Odawara, both
in memory of the daughter of Ujitsuna and in the hope of the well-being of
the people when Tsunashige was the chief of Tamanawa Castle
(玉縄城). The founding priest was Kan'yo Sontei
(感誉存貞). The fourth chief priest, Genei (源栄), was so virtuous and widely
known that even Tokugawa Ieyasu (徳川家康, 1542-1616) visited him here at the
temple.
Grounds: After you pass through the
temple gate, you will see stone Buddhist statues and stone stupas neatly
arranged on both sides of the approach to the Main Hall. This hall houses
an Amida- sanzon (阿弥陀三尊), a triad of Amida Nyorai (阿弥陀如来) and two
bodhisattvas, Kannon Bosatsu (観音菩薩) and Seishi Bosatsu (勢至菩薩).
To the right are statues of Zendo (善導,
613-681), a Chinese priest, and Honen (法然, 1133-1212), and to the left is
a statue of Ujitsuna's wife. This statue is valuable because both the
carver's name, Sotaku (宗琢) and the time of carving, the Muromachi period
(1336-1573), are identified.
Treasure Hall
within the upper courtyard holds a statue of Tokugawa Ieyasu along with
mortuary tablets of himself and his father, Matsudaira Hirotada (松平広忠,
1526-1549). Other treasures in the Hall are: a painting of Kurikara Ryuo
(倶梨伽羅龍王), a kind of dragon king said to be the incarnation of a sword,
chiken (智剣), carried by Fudo Myoo (不動明王) (donated by Ujiyasu); a painting
called the Yamagoe Amida Zu (山越阿弥陀図), "Mountain-crossing Amida"; a
Declaration of Sincerity, kishomon (起請文); an old spear, and some old
documents.
Within the grounds are two
wells, one called Kisshosui (吉祥水) and the other Ume no I Well (梅の井), both
of which are said to produce water of fine quality. A bell cast in 1819
hangs in the belfry. In the cemetery are the tombs of Ujitsuna's wife, who
died in 1558, and family members of the Hojo (北条) in Odawara.
Full name: Ganraizan (岩瀬山)
Sainenji Denomination: Jodo sect (浄土宗) Location:
The temple is approximately 500 meters from Daichoji Temple
in the direction of Imaizumi. History: The temple
was founded some time between 1532 and 1555.
Grounds:
In the Main Hall are statues of Amida Nyorai, Zendo, and
Honen. The cave behind the Main Hall is said to have been used by the
founding priest, Un'yo Kodo (運 誉光道) for training, but was originally a
horizontal cave tomb.
The temple also holds
statues of a husband and wife named Kiya (木屋). The two lived in Edo, and
wanted to leave realistic statues of themselves.
Hakusan Jinja Shrine (白山神社) and Bishamondo Hall
(毘沙門堂) |
Location: One access to Hakusan Jinja
Shrine is to take a bus from Ofuna Station and get off at Hakusan Jinja
Mae Bus Stop (白山神社前). A 100-meter walk from there will bring you to the
shrine on a hillside to the left.
Grounds: At
the beginning of the approach you will see a stone lantern, and a stone
monument which bears a kyoka (狂歌), a comic tanka (短歌), composed by
Suikitei Ame no Hiromaru (酔亀亭天広丸), who was born in this area in the Edo
period (1603-1867).
On the way to the Main
Hall you will notice a koshinto-type (庚申塔) stone monument, which has
carvings in relief of three monkeys and is inscribed with an era name
寛文十二年 (corresponding to 1672), and a Bato Kannon (馬頭観音) monument among
eight stone monuments. A little further Is
another stone monument bearing the characters "毘沙門,"
Bishamon. At the top of the steep stairway is
the Main Hall of the shrine under a tall ginkgo
tree.
The shrine is the tutelary deity of
the Imaizumi area and is dedicated to Kukuri Hime no Mikoto
(菊理姫之命). In front of the hall, a long and
thick straw rope in the shape of a large "creature" can be seen hung
between two trees. It represents a huge centipede, which is said to also
be the guardian deity that features in the Oshimesai Festival (大注連祭) held
on the first Sunday in September.
Another
hall in the grounds is a Bishamondo (毘沙門堂), which dates back to the Heian
period (794-1185/92). Inside is a statue of Bishamonten, also called
Tamonten (多聞天), which is open to the public during the shrine's festival
in September. Bishamonten is one of Shitenno (四天 王, Four Deva Kings), who
on guard halfway up the mountain called Shumisen (須弥山), atop which
Taishakuten (帝釈天) resides. They are to maintain Buddhist order and to
protect those who believe in Buddhism.
There is a story that in 1191, Minamoto no Yoritomo obtained the statue
when he visited Kuramadera Temple (鞍馬寺) in Kyoto, and subsequently
enshrined it here. The 1.8-meter-high statue was reputedly carved by Gyoki
(行基, 668-749) in the Nara period (710-794), but is thought to be an actual
work from the late Heian period. In front of the statue is another
Bishamonten, made in the Muromachi period (1336-1573), and its attendants:
Kisshoten (吉祥天) and Zennishidoji or Zennijidoji
(善膩師童子).
Konsenji Temple (今泉寺) to the left
of the approach to the shrine is a sub-temple of Kenchoji (建長寺)
reconstructed in 1982 and houses, as the main image, a statue of Shutsuzan
Shaka or Shussan Shaka (出山釈迦), literally, "Mountain-Leaving Shakyamuni
(after his ascetic practices in the mountain)," allegedly the work of
Gyoki (行基, 668-749)
Location: Sanzaigaike Pond can be reached
from Imaizumi Fudo Bus Stop (今泉不動). Grounds: The
nearby area is arranged as a park, called Sanzaigaike Shinrin Koen (散在ケ池
森林公園). Cherry blossoms in the spring and maple leaves in the fall, plus a
woody land abounding with various kinds of plants attract many people
regardless of the season.
In the 1860s,
the pond was expanded to serve as a dam for the irrigation of paddy fields
in the lower part of the area, but due to housing development and the
disappearance of the paddies that function has now ended.
Shomyoji Temple (称名寺) and Imaizumi Fudo (今泉不動)
|
Full name: Konsenzan (今泉山)
Shomyoji Denomination: Jodo sect (浄土宗) Location:
If you take the lane from Imaizumi Fudo Bus Stop toward the
hillside and follow it to its end, passing by an incineration factory,
Imaizumi Clean Center (今泉クリーンセンター), you will see Shomyoji
Temple.
History: Kukai, or Kobo Daishi, was
supposedly the founding priest, and the nearby Fudodo Hall (不動堂), closely
related to him, is in under this temple. The temple once declined but was
restored by Chokuyo Rennyu (直誉蓮入) in the Edo
period.
Grounds: The temple grounds are thickly
surrounded by trees and seem all the more quiet because of the sound of
the nearby waterfalls.
When you pass
through the Sammon Gate, you will see an unusual-looking Jizo (地蔵) statue,
called Hanataka Jizo (鼻高地蔵), and five other Jizo on the hillside to the
left. At the end of the approach are the Main Hall and Kuin (庫院, temple
office) to the left.
During the Kamakura
period, successive Minamoto (源) shoguns and Hojo (北条) regents visited here
for prayer but thereafter the temple was nearly
abandoned. In the early Edo period on a day
when Rennyu, a priest, visited Enoshima Island and prayed to Benzaiten
(弁才天) there, he was given a divine message that he should offer a prayer
to Fudo Myoo in Imaizumi. Rennyu followed this advice and prayed here for
seven days in front of Fudo Myoo.
Afterwards, the residents in this area were blessed over the years with
abundant harvests. Thus, the local people, thankful for the blessing, had
two halls built: one for Fudo Myoo and the other for
Amida.
In 1693, the present name,
Shomyoji, was created by Teiyo (貞誉), a priest from Zojoji Templein Edo.
Since then, the temple has been popular and many people visit here,
especially on February 28, when the annual festival is held.
The Main Hall houses images of Amida
and twenty-five attending Bosatsu (二十五菩薩), including Kannon Bosatsu and
Seishi Bosatsu (Amida's two major attendants). Their configuration is
called Shoju Raigo Zo (聖衆来迎像) and is very rare in
Kamakura. They depict Amida's great mercy in
which Amida, attended by twenty-five Bosatsu, all on clouds, are
descending from the Western Paradise to receive a believer on his
deathbed. The work is said to have been made in the Heian period but it
has been proved to be a work of the Edo
period. The structure of the inner sanctum and
the pillars are elaborately decorated. Next to the Main Hall is Bentendo
Hall, in which a statue of Benten is enshrined.
If you climb up the steep stairway behind the Main Hall, you will see a
Fudodo Hall (不動堂), which houses a stone statue of Fudo Myoo. This is also
called Moto Fudo (元不動) or Imaizumi Fudo. Fudo Myoo, an incarnation of
Dainichi Nyorai (大日如来), subdues all kinds of evil and rids people of their
worldly desires. On the walls of the hall hang layers of ema (絵馬), votive
tablets.
To the right of the Main Hall you
will see a line of stone images: the one in the center is Dainichi Nyorai,
the others are Sanjuroku-doji (三十六童子), literally, Thirty-six Children, who
are presumed to be young monks in apprenticeship or young attendants to
Bosatsu.
By retracing your steps,
passing Bentendo Hall, and going down more stone steps, you will reach a
pair of waterfalls: the three-meter-high Otaki (男滝), literally, "Male
Waterfall," and the 1.2-meter-high Metaki (女滝), "Female Waterfall." They
were, tradition says, created by Kobo Daishi when he dug two recesses in
the cliff to provide water for local people in need.
Area: Ofuna (大船) and Takano (高野)
Place Name The name of the area, Ofuna,
is said to be a corruption of "Awafune", part of the name of a mountain,
Awafuneyama (粟船山) behind Jorakuji Temple (常楽寺). The "awa (粟)" in Awafune
means millet and the "fune (船)" means a ship. In olden days, when parts of
the area were under water and inlets were here and there, ships laden with
millet grain frequented here. After the sea
receded, a mountain appeared and it came to be called Awafuneyama Mountain
in connection with "awa" and "fune." Until the mid-Edo period (1603-1867),
Ofuna was written 粟船 or 青船.
Full name: Zokusensan (粟船山)
Jorakuji Denomination: Rinzai Zen sect (臨済宗) Location:
To visit Jorakuji Temple, take a bus from Ofuna Station and
get off at Hanareyama (離山) Bus Stop. Pass Ofuna Junior High School (大船中学校)
on your right and continue some 50 meters, and you will see the temple on
the left.
History: Hojo Yasutoki had the temple
built for the repose of the soul of his mother-in-law, and relocated her
grave here from a nearby area. At the start,
the temple was named Awafunemido (粟船御堂) and the opening ceremony was
presided over by Taiko Gyoyu (退耕行勇,
1163-1241). Yasutoki was also buried here, in
1242, and the temple name was changed to Jorakuji after his posthumous
name, Jorakuin (常楽院). Four years later in
1246, Rankei Doryu came here from Jufukuji Temple (寿福寺) at the request of
Hojo Tokiyori (北條時頼, 1227-63), the fifth regent, and opened a training
center for Zen meditation. Doryu resided here until Kenchoji Temple (建長寺)
was completed in 1253. From that time on,
because of this connection, the temple was highly thought of by the
priests of Kenchoji. However, in time, the temple was reduced to only
Butsuden Hall (仏殿) and Monjudo Hall (文殊堂) through a series of disasters.
Grounds: On the left-hand side of the pathway
to the temple stands a stone monument with the inscription 木曾義高 北条泰時公墓,
Tombs for Kiso Yoshitaka (木曾義高, 1173-1184) and Hojo Yasutoki (北条泰時,
1183-1242). The latter was the third regent of the Kamakura bakufu (鎌倉幕府)
and the founding patron of the temple.
If you continue north
along the lane lined with pine trees, a thatched Sammon Gate (山門) will
come into sight. The plaque on the beam of the gate bears the characters
粟船山, the sango of the temple, which, in this case, must be read
"zokusensan," not "awafuneyama," and are in the handwriting of Mokuan
Seito (木菴性とう) made in 1688.
After you
pass through the gate, you will see the priests' living quarters to the
right, and the Main Hall next to it in quiet grounds surrounded by trees.
The Main Hall houses a number of Buddhist images: Shaka Nyorai (釈迦如来),
Rankei Doryu (蘭渓道隆, 1213-78), a.k.a. Daikaku Zenji (大覚禅師), and Otogodoji
(乙護童子), a deity in the form of a child who protects Buddhism and takes
care of ascetics.
When you pass by an old
ginkgo tree, reportedly planted by Yasutoki himself, you will soon be in
front of Butsuden Hall, rebuilt in 1988, and designated an Important
Cultural Property by Kanagawa Prefecture.
Inside is an image of Amida Nyorai (阿弥陀如来) in the center, flanked by
Kannon Bosatsu (観音菩薩) and Seishi Bosatsu (勢至菩薩). To their right stands an
image of Rankei Doryu made in the Muromachi period (1336-1573).
On the ceiling is a picture of a dragon in
clouds called Unryu (雲龍) by Kano Yukinobu (狩野雪信, a.k.a. Kiyohara Yukinobu,
a woman painter in the early Edo period), unusual in that its eyes were
painted closed, supposedly to keep it from moving around, because the
dragon, it is said, made a roaring sound when it went out to drink
water.
Next to Butsuden
Hall is Monjudo Hall (文殊堂). It was transferred from the grounds of Eishoji
Temple (英勝寺) in Ogigayatsu (扇ガ谷) in the early Meiji Period (1867-1912),
and it houses an image of Monju, allegedly brought from China by Rankei
Doryu, and images of Fudo Myoo (不動明王) and Bishamonten
(毘沙門天). The Monju image (made in the late
Kamakura period (1185/92-1333) and designated an Important Cultural
Property by Kanagawa Prefecture) is popular because it gives wisdom to all
the faithful. It is opened to the public on January 25, when the Monju
Festival is held.
In the graveyard behind the halls are tombs for a
number of celebrated people. In the center is the tomb of Ryuen (竜淵), a
priest, who restored the temple in the mid-nineteenth century, and to the
right the tomb of Hojo Yasutoki, then one for Daio Kokushi (大応国師, also
called Nampo Jomin, 南浦紹明, fourteenth century).
The temple has the oldest bronze bell in
Kamakura, with the era name 宝治ニ年(corresponding to 1248)and is designated
an Important Cultural Property. It was made in
memory of Yasutoki by Tokiyori, Yasutoki's great grandson. Because of its
workmanship, the bell is counted among the three most celebrated bells in
Kamakura, the others being at Kenchoji and Engakuji (円覚寺). It is now on
loan to Kamakura Kokuhokan (鎌倉国宝館), where it is on display. Though not as
massive as the others it is well-balanced, and bears the characters 寺号常楽
(jigo Joraku).
Story: Hojo Yasutoki, the
founder of the temple, was born in 1183 as the first son of Hojo Yoshitoki
(北條義時, 1163-1224), the second regent. Yasutoki made the first law for
warriors, Goseibai Shikimoku (御成敗式目, also called Joei Shikimoku, 貞永式目) in
1232. The basic principles for the law were
based on the customs and practices formed from the time of Minamoto no
Yoritomo (源頼朝, 1147-99). It clarified the rights and duties among
warriors, established the basic grounds for administering the affairs of
state and justice, and became the model for other warrior
laws. Though Yasutoki was regent, he led a
simple life, and was trusted by his men. He died at the age of sixty after
building up the political system and reinforcing the authority of the
government.
Shikiten-Munetsuchi Pond (色天無熱池) The pond
to the right of the Main Hall is called Shikiten-Munetsu-chi. "Shikiten"
is the name of the second of the Three Worlds: the first of which is The
World of Desire, in which inhabitants have both appetite and sexual
desire; the second The World of Form, in which they have neither appetite
nor sexual desire; and the third The Formless World, in which inhabitants
have no physical form.
"Munetsu-chi" is
the pond where Anokuda Ryuo (阿縟達龍王), the most virtuous King, resides, and
is a comfortable place without the scorching flames that would otherwise
torture the damned. Be that as it may, this pond is an ideal place for
reflecting on what it means to be living in a world full of appetites and
earthly desires.
The Tomb of Kiso Yoshitaka (木曾義高の墓)
Atop Mt. Awafune behind Jorakuji Temple is a
mound and a stone monument surrounded by cherry trees. The mound is for
Kiso Yoshitaka, the eldest son of Minamoto no Yoshinaka (or, popularly,
Kiso Yoshinaka, 木曾義仲, 1154-84). There is a sad story behind the reason he
was buried here in such a lonesome place. Kiso
Yoshinaka was a cousin of Minamoto no Yoritomo, and when Yoshinaka rose up
against the Taira, he sent his son to Yoritomo to show his loyalty.
Yoshitaka (1173-84) then became the betrothed of Yoritomo's eldest
daughter, Ohime (大姫, 1179?-97), although in truth Yoshitaka was virtually
a hostage. Later, when Yoshinaka and Yoritomo
came to vie for power, Yoshinaka was defeated and killed in 1184.
Thereafter, Yoritomo waited for an opportunity to kill Yoshitaka. When
Ohime discovered this, she pleaded with her father, Yoritomo, not to carry
out his intention, but to no avail. Ohime's mother, Masako (政子,
1157-1225), tried to thwart Yoritomo by letting Yoshitaka flee disguised
as a girl. This, however, gave Yoritomo the
excuse he needed to put his scheme into practice, and Yoshitaka was killed
on the riverbed of the Irumagawa River (入間川). It was in the same year when
his father was defeated and killed. He was first buried in a rice field
nearby, but relocated here in 1680 by a local villager.
Full name: Ten'eisan (天衛山)
Tamon'in Denomination: Shingon sect (真言宗) Location:
To reach Tamon'in, walk east along the road in front of
Jorakuji Temple to the crossroad equipped with traffic lights. Cross there
and continue some 400 meters walking among houses, and you will see the
temple, which is popularly known as Togenuki Jizo (とげぬき地蔵), literally,
"Splinter-Pulling Jizo."
History: The temple was found
between 1469-87 by the Amakasu clan (甘粕氏) by inviting priest Nankai sozu
(南介僧都).
Grounds: Around the temple gate are
some koshin-to type (庚申塔) stone monuments. In the Main Hall are images of
Bishamonten and Eleven-faced Kannon, or Juichimen Kannon
(十一面観音). Among the treasures the temple
possesses are decrees issued by three cloistered Emperors: one is by
Go-Shirakawa-in (後白河院, 1127-92) in 1183, another is by Go-Saga-in (後嵯峨院,
1220-72) in 1250, and the other is by Kogon-in (光厳院, 1313-64) in
1346. Another treasure is a lacquered bowl
with a high foot, which bears the era name 天正九年 (corresponding to 1581),
but which is now on loan to Kamakura Kokuhokan.
Kumano Jinja Shrine (熊野神社)
| Kumano Jinja Shrine is
located next to Tamon'in and is dedicated to the tutelary deity of the
Ofuna area. The shrine was built by the Amagasu (甘糟) in the middle of the
Muromachi period and is dedicated to Yamato Takeru no Mikoto (日本武尊).
In the Main Hall is a wooden statue in a type
of formal wear called sokutai (束帯), a ceremonial court dress worn by an
emperor and court officials (typically in the Heian period: 794-1185/92).
Next to the Main Hall is Haiden Hall, Worship Hall, which is also called
Kaguraden (神楽殿) because it functions as a hall for kagura (神楽), sacred
dancing.
Rokkokukenzan is a
mountain among the hills that range from Engakuji Temple toward Ofuna. The
name Rokkokukenzan, literally, "Six-Provinces-Viewing Mountain," derives
from the fact that from the top of this mountain in olden days one was
able to have a broad view of six provinces, Awa (安房, southern part of
Chiba Prefecture), Kazusa (上総, approximately the central part of Chiba
Prefecture), Shimosa (下総, northern part of Chiba Prefecture and southern
part of Ibaraki), Musashi (武蔵, Tokyo and Saitama Prefecture), Sagami (相模,
Kanagawa Prefecture), and Izu (伊豆, western part of Shizuoka Prefecture).
At the top of the mountain is a mound
called Fujizuka (富士塚). Some large and small stone monuments mark this area
as the site of a religious rite with regard to Mt. Fuji. As Mt. Fuji was
considered from ancient times to be sacred, climbing it started as a
religious practice. In the Edo period, the practice became popular and
even religious circles, called Fujiko (富士講), were organized among the
people. Places where Mt. Fuji could be clearly viewed also came to be
regarded as sacred and monuments were built.
Kita-Kamakura Art Museum (北鎌倉美術館)
| The museum was built in
1989, and displays artistic handcrafts centering on dyeing and weaving.
The main features are traditional garb for priests, courtiers, and
warriors. In addition, there are articles for daily use and tea utensils.
The museum is closed Mondays.
|