- Hie Shrine
Infobox Shinto shrine
name = Hie Shrine
日枝神社
caption =
type =
dedication = Ōyamakui-no-kami
founded = 1478
closed =
founder =Ōta Dōkan
priest =
address = 2-10-5, Nagata-chōChiyoda, Tokyo 100-0014
phone = +81 (03) 3581-2471
website = http://www.hiejinja.net/jinja/english/index.htmlThe nihongo|Hie Shrine|日枝神社|Hie Jinja is aShinto shrine in Nagatachō,Chiyoda, Tokyo ,Japan . Its June 15Sannō Matsuri is one of the three greatJapanese festivals ofEdo (the forerunner ofTokyo ). Other names for the shrine include Hiyoshi Sannō-sha, Hiyoshi Sannō Daigongen-sha, Edo Sannō Daigongen, Kōjimachi Sannō, Sannō-sha, and Sannō-sama.The main god of the shrine is Ōyamakui-no-kami.
The date of establishment of the Hie Shrine is uncertain. According to one theory,
Ōta Dōkan established it in 1478. Another theory identifies the Hie with the Sannō Shrine mentioned in a 1362 record of theKumano Nachi Taisha .Tokugawa Ieyasu relocated it to the grounds ofEdo Castle , and in 1604 his sonTokugawa Hidetada moved it out, so the people ofEdo could worship there. The "shaden" was lost to theGreat Fire of Meireki of 1657, and in 1659Tokugawa Ietsuna rebuilt it at its present location. The shrine stands southwest of the castle, in the "ura kimon" direction according toonmyōdō .The "shaden" was lost again to the
bombing of Tokyo in World War II . The present structure dates from 1958.The Hie Shrine possesses one National Treasure, a sword. It also holds 14 Important Cultural Assets, 13 swords and one
naginata .Tameike-Sannō Station on the Tokyo Metro Ginza and Namboku Lines,Kokkai-gijidō-mae Station on the Marunouchi and Chiyoda Lines, andAkasaka-mitsuke Station on the Ginza and Marunouchi Lines are the closest stops to the shrine.References
This article incorporates material from 日枝神社 (Hie Jinja) in the Japanese Wikipedia, retrieved
September 16 ,2007 .External links
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