Kibitsu Shrine (Bingo) Explained

Kibitsu Shrine
吉備津神社
Map Type:Japan Hiroshima Prefecture#Japan
Coordinates:34.5693°N 133.2711°W
Map Relief:1
Religious Affiliation:Shinto
Type:Kibitsu
Deity:Kibitsuhiko-no-mikoto
Location:400 Miyauchi, Shin'ichi-chō, Fukuyama-shi, Hiroshima-ken 729-3104
Festival:November 23

is a Shinto shrine in the Shin'ichi-chō neighborhood of the city of Fukuyama in Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan. It is the ichinomiya of former Bingo Province. The main festival of the shrine is held annually on November 23.[1]

Enshrined kami

The kami enshrined at Kibitsu Jinja are:

History

The origins of Kibitsu Jinja are uncertain. The shrine claims that when Kibi Province was divided into three provinces in 806, it was established as a bunrei from the original Kibitsu Shrine in Okayama. However, there is no documentary evidence to support this, and the shrine does not appear in the Engishiki, which was complied between 905 and 967 AD. The first time the shrine is mentioned in a historical source is in 1148 in which the name is mentioned in the records of Yasaka Shrine, and archaeological excavations on the grounds have found not artifacts earlier than the 12th century. However, from the Kamakura period, it was regarded as the ichinomiya of the province, and had a large number of estates, with which it often clashed with secular authorities.

During the Nanboku-cho period, the shrine is the location where Imperial loyalist Sakurayama Koretoshi (桜山茲俊) raised an army in 1331 in support of the Southern Court. However, as detailed in the Taiheiki, after receiving a false report that Kusunoki Masashige had been defeated at Akasaka Castle, he committed suicide with his wife and children and burned the shrine down.[2] This event led to the area around the shrine to be designated as a National Historic Site in 1934.[3]

Kō no Moroyasu issued a decree in 1346 ordering the Bingo shugo to stop harassing the shrine. During the Sengoku period, the shrine was supported by Mōri Terumoto, and in the Edo Period it was supported by the Fukushima clan and the Mizuno clan who were daimyō of Fukuyama Domain. After the Meiji Restoration, it was listed as a in 1871.[4]

The shrine is located a twenty-minute walk from Shin-ichi Station on the JR West Fukuen Line.[5]

Cultural properties

National Important Cultural Properties

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Shibuya . Nobuhiro . Shokoku jinja Ichinomiya Ninomiya San'nomiya . 2015 . Yamakawa shuppansha . 978-4634150867 . Japanese.
  2. https://web.archive.org/web/20050312054126/http://www.city.fukuyama.hiroshima.jp/bunka/bunkazai/shisekibu/30.html Fukushima City home page
  3. Web site: 一宮(桜山慈俊挙兵伝説地). Ichinomiya (Sakurayama jishun kyohei densetsu-chi). Japanese . . August 20, 2020.
  4. Book: Yoshiki . Emi . Zenkoku 'Ichinomiya' tettei gaido . 2007 . PHP Institute . 978-4569669304 . Japanese.
  5. Book: Okada . Shoji . Taiyō no chizuchō 24 zenkoku 'Ichinomiya' meguri . 2014 . Heibonsha . 978-4582945614 . Japanese.
  6. Web site: 吉備津神社本殿. Kibitsu Jinja Honden. Japanese . . August 20, 2020.
  7. Web site: 木造狛犬. Mokuzo Komainu. Japanese . . August 20, 2020.
  8. Web site: 毛抜形太刀〈銘備州尾道五阿弥長行天文廿四年六月吉日/吉備津宮奉寄進御太刀(二字不明)次郎左エ門尉忠吉/拵付〉. Japanese . . August 20, 2020.
  9. Web site: 毛抜形太刀〈銘備州尾道五阿弥長行天文廿四年六月吉日/吉備津宮奉寄進御太刀(以下不明)/拵付〉. Sumiyoshi-sha Horaku Hyakushu Waka Strip. Japanese . . August 20, 2020.
  10. Web site: 毛抜形太刀〈銘正光/拵付〉〉. Japanese . . August 20, 2020.
  11. Web site: 毛抜形太刀〈銘正光/拵付〉. Japanese . . August 20, 2020.