Nishinomiya Shrine

Nishinomiya Shrine
Haiden

Nishinomiya Jinja (西宮神社 nishinomiyajinja?) is a Shinto shrine in Nishinomiya, Hyōgo, Japan. It is the head shrine of the Ebisu sect of Shinto, and it is said that there are about 3,500 shrines under it. Locals call the shrine ‘Ebessan’. It is famous for the Tōka-Ebisu festival, which is held on January 10 every year. Particular to this festival is the "Lucky Men" race. Begun during the Edo Period, participants gather in front of the shrine's main gate before 6 am on the 10th of January. At 6 am, the shrine's drum sounds, the gates are opened, and the assembled crowd sprints perilously 230 meters to the main hall. The top three finishers are given the title of "Lucky Men," and of those three the champion is known as the "Luckiest Man." The race has been known to attract more than 6,000 runners.[1]

Contents

Objects of worship

Nishinomiya Shrine has three small inner shrines and each shrine enshrines one or two kami. The first shrine enshrines Nishinomiya-Ōkami, or Ebisu-no-mikoto, namely Ebisu. The kami of the second shrine are Amaterasu-Ōmikami and Ōkuninushino-Mikoto. The third shrine is for Susanoono-Mikoto.

History

It is not clear when this shrine was established. However, it is recorded that it was already at this site, under the name Ebisu-sha, and attracting many worshippers during the Heian Period. For many centuries it was known as Nangu-sha, the "Southern Shrine", in reference to its status as a branch shrine of Hirota Shrine, which is located to its north in Nishinomiya. Nishinomiya Shrine itself had a similar relationship with Koshikiiwa Shrine, which was sometimes called Kita no Ebisu, meaning the Northern Ebisu.

Access

References

  1. ^ Track runner wins 'lucky man' race, The Japan Times, http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20100111a4.html, retrieved 10 January 2010 .

External links

Coordinates: 34°44′09″N 135°20′04″E / 34.73583°N 135.33444°E / 34.73583; 135.33444


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Nishinomiya — 西宮   Core city   西宮市 · Nishinomiya …   Wikipedia

  • Nishinomiya Station (Hanshin) — Nishinomiya Station 西宮駅 Nishinomiya Station east entrance Location …   Wikipedia

  • Nishinomiya, Hyōgo — Infobox City Japan Name= Nishinomiya JapaneseName= 西宮市 Map Region= Kansai Prefecture= Hyōgo District= Area km2= 99.96 PopDate= April 1, 2008 Population= 476,329 Density km2= Coords= LatitudeDegrees= 34 LatitudeMinutes= 44 LatitudeSeconds=… …   Wikipedia

  • Nishinomiya ebisu jinja —    A major shrine in Nishinomiya (the name of the town means western shrine ) near Osaka, dedicated to Ebisu. The worship of the joint deities Ebisu and (the now little known) Saburo originated there in a massha of the Hirota jinja to the East.… …   A Popular Dictionary of Shinto

  • Koshikiiwa Shrine — nihongo|Koshikiiwa Jinja|越木岩神社|Koshikiiwa jinja is a Shinto shrine in Nishinomiya, Hyōgo, Japan . The other name of this shrine is Ebisudaijingu. The focus of this shrine is a megalith called Koshiki iwa , literally, Rice Steamer Rock , because… …   Wikipedia

  • Hirota Shrine — Infobox Shinto shrine name = Hirota Shrine 広田神社 width = caption = Main hall type = Grand Shrine, one of the Nijūnisha dedication = Amaterasu founded = 3rd century closed = founder = Empress Jingū priest = address = 7 7 Taisha chō, Nishinomiya,… …   Wikipedia

  • Kobe Nishinomiya jinja —    A famous shrine in Nishinomiya (Kobe) dedicated to Nishinomiya Ebisu , the kami of fishermen and merchants. It has about 3,000 branch temples (bunsha) throughout Japan …   A Popular Dictionary of Shinto

  • List of Shinto shrines — This is a list of well known Shinto shrines in Japan. For Shinto shrines in other countries, scroll down to the See also section.Shinto shrines from specific sects or new churches are not included in this list.Hokkaidō and TōhokuHokkaidō*… …   Wikipedia

  • Santuarios sintoístas — Anexo:Santuarios sintoístas Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Esta es una lista de templos sintoístas del mundo. Contenido 1 Japón 1.1 Kyoto 1.2 Hokkaidō 1.3 Aomori …   Wikipedia Español

  • Anexo:Santuarios sintoístas — Esta es una lista de templos sintoístas del mundo. Contenido 1 Japón 1.1 Kyoto 1.2 Hokkaidō 1.3 Aomori 1.4 Iwate …   Wikipedia Español

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”