Heian Shrine

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Heian Shrine
平安神宮 (Heian Jingu)
250px
Main Hall (Daigokuden)
Information
Type Kanpeitaisha
Chokusaisha
Beppyo jinja
Dedicated to Emperor Kanmu
Emperor Komei
Founded March 15th, 1895
Reisai Reitaisai (April 15th)
Honden style Shichigensya-Nagare-zukuri (七間社流造)
Address 97, Okazaki-Nishi-tenno-cho, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto-shi, Kyoto Prefecture, JAPAN, 606-8341
Website www.heianjingu.or.jp
Shinto torii icon vermillion.svg Glossary of Shinto
File:Heian Shrine Torii Gate.JPG
Heian Shrine Torii Gate, Kyoto, Japan

The Heian Shrine (平安神宮 Heian-jingū?) is a Shinto shrine located in Sakyō-ku, Kyoto, Japan. The Shrine is ranked as a Beppyou Jinja (the top rank for shrines) by the Association of Shinto Shrines. It is listed as an important cultural property of Japan.

History

Main gate (Ōtenmon)
File:HeianShrine.jpg
Castle in the corner (Sōryūrō)
Lake at Heian Shrine

In 1895, a partial reproduction of the Heian Palace from Heian-kyō (the former name of Kyoto) was planned for construction for the 1100th anniversary of the establishment of Heian-kyō. The Industrial exposition fair (an exhibition of development of Japanese and foreign cultures) was held in Kyoto that year, where the replica was to be the main monument. However, failure to buy enough land where the Heian Palace used to stand, the building was built in Okazaki at 5/8 scale of the original. The Heian-jingū was built according to designs by Itō Chūta.

After the Exhibition ended, the building was kept as a shrine in memory of the 50th Emperor, Emperor Kanmu, who was the Emperor when Heian-kyō became the capital. In 1940, Emperor Kōmei was added to the list of dedication.

Kyoto was shocked and depressed after the capital was moved to Tokyo. Later, the citizens came together to build a new city after World War II. The construction of Heian Shrine was a symbol of revival for the city. The revival consisted of the new Kyoto in education, culture, industry, and daily life, where at the same time the "good old" Kyoto was maintained.

In 1976, the Shrine was set on fire; and nine of the buildings, including the honden, or main sanctuary, burned down. Three years later, the burned buildings were reconstructed with money collected from donations.[1]

Architecture

The architecture design was a reproduction of the Chōdōin (Emperor’s palace in the former eras) in 5/8th scale (in length). The large red entrance gate is a reproduction of the Outenmon of the Chōdōin. The architecture of the main palace mirrors the style and features of the Kyoto Imperial Palace,[2] the style from the 11th-12th century (late Heian Period). The Shrine’s torii is one of the largest in Japan.

Garden

The Japanese-style garden takes up about half the land area (approximately 33060 m2). Renowned gardener Ogawa Jihei VII, also known as Ueji, created the garden over a 20-year period. The water used in the ponds comes from the Lake Biwa Canal. Species otherwise rare in Japan such as Acheilognathus cyanostigma, the Yellow pond turtle and the Japanese pond turtle live around the ponds. Visitors may feed the fish and turtles with food sold around the ponds.

Festivals

Annual festivals celebrate the memory of Emperor Kōmei (late January) and Emperor Kammu (early April).[2]

On October 22, Heian-jingū hosts the Jidai Matsuri,[1] which is one of the most important festivals of Kyoto. The procession of this festival begins at the old Imperial palace, and includes carrying the mikoshi (portable shrines) of Emperors Kanmu and Kōmei to the Heian-jingū.

The Shrine is also used for traditional Japanese weddings as well as concerts. It is rare for a modern concert to be held at a historic site like the shrine, but merging modern and old culture in Kyoto has become a trend.

Around the Shrine

Adjacent to the Shrine is Okazaki Park, where visitors can learn about culture. The Shrine is surrounded by the Kyoto Public Library, Kyoto Municipal Museum of Art, the National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto, Kyoto Kaikan, and the Kyoto Zoo.

See also

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Nussbaum, "Heian jingū" in p. 303, p. 303, at Google Books
  2. 2.0 2.1 Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005). "Heian jingū" in Japan Encyclopedia, pp. 302-303, p. 302, at Google Books

References

  • 平安神宮 [1]
  • 国指定文化財データベース [2]

External links

Media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at Wikimedia Commons

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