Kameido Tenjin Shrine
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Kameido Tenjin Shrine is a Japanese Tenman-gu shrine located in Kameido,
Koto Ward Koto may refer to: * Koto (band), an Italian synth pop group * Koto (instrument), a Japanese musical instrument * Koto (kana), a ligature of two Japanese katakana * Koto (traditional clothing), a traditional dress made by Afro-Surinamese women * K ...
, Tokyo. The shrine is dedicated to Sugawara no Michizane, a 9th-century Japanese scholar.


Description

The Kameido shine was built in honor of Sugawara no Michizane, a prominent Japanese politician and scholar. Despite a long and successful career serving multiple Japanese emperors, Michizane was eventually demoted from his position in the imperial court by the political machinations of Fujiwara no Tokihira. Upon Michizane's death several years later, a series of natural disasters struck Japan; some attributed these events to the ghost of Michizane. To placate the departed scholar's spirit, a number of shrines were built (including one in Kyoto, then the imperial capital) in his honor, with many shrines portraying Michizane as a kami; even after the disasters subsided, this tradition of honoring Michizane's skill continued and many more shrines were built in his name.Morris, I. (1975). ''The Nobility of Failure: Tragic Heroes in the History of Japan'' The Kameido Tenjin Shrine was built in Tokyo in 1646. Tokyo was at time a port city of some importance, but was not yet the capital of Japan. Regardless, many people from Tokyo paid homage to Michizane at the shrine between 1646 and 1945. The original Kameido shrine, built out of wood, was destroyed during World War II when the United States Air Force conducted a firebombing campaign against Tokyo; these bombings resulted in the destruction of large parts of the city. In the years after the war, the shrine was rebuilt with more modern materials, such as concrete. The restored shrine is famous for a number of its prominent features; the shrine's grounds contain a number of ponds bridged by drum bridges, and compound also has an abundance of plum trees. Every year on 25 January, the custodians of the shrine present a carved good luck charm to a visitor. Between April and May, the Fuji Matsuri festival is held at the shrine. The festival entails the celebration of flowers, namely the-then in bloom Wisteria.


Gallery

File:Toyokuni Kameido.jpg, Toyokuni: Kameido (ca. 1780/90) File:Kameido Kunitora.jpg, Kunitora: Kameido (ca. 1800) File:Edo meisho Kameido.jpg, Kameido (Detail)
aus ''Edo meisho zue'' (1838) File:Hiroshge Kameido Winter.jpg, Hiroshige: Kameido in Winter File:Hiroshige Kameido.jpg, Hiroshige: Kameido frontside File:Kameido Foto.jpg, Photo, early 20th century File:Yoshida Kameidô.jpg,
Yoshida Hiroshi was a 20th-century Japanese painter and woodblock printmaker. He is regarded as one of the greatest artists of the shin-hanga style, and is noted especially for his excellent landscape prints. Yoshida travelled widely, and was particularly known ...
, 1927 File:Unusual Views of Celebrated Bridges in the Provinces-Kameido Tenjin Taiko Hashi.jpg,
Hokusai , known simply as Hokusai, was a Japanese ukiyo-e artist of the Edo period, active as a painter and printmaker. He is best known for the woodblock printing in Japan, woodblock print series ''Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji'', which includes the ...
File:Compiled Album from Four Series- A Mirror of Famous Generals of Japan; Comic Pictures of Famous Places in Civilizing Tokyo; Twenty-four Accomplishments in Imperial Japan; Twenty-four Hours LACMA M.84.31.30 (2 of 35).jpg File:Kameido Tenjin Shrine.jpg File:Viewing the Wisteria on Taiko Bridges in Kameido Tenjin Shrine, Kameido, Tokyo (藤見物, 亀戸天神社 太鼓橋, 東京都江東区亀戸) (1914-09 by Elstner Hilton) clipped.jpg, One of the shrine's drum bridges in 1914 File:Kameido Tenjinsha1.jpg, Wisteria floribunda File:Kameido Tenjin Kiku-Matsuri.jpg, Chrysanthemum Festival (November 15, 2020)


References

{{Authority control Tenjin faith Shinto shrines in Tokyo 1646 establishments in Japan Sugawara no Michizane