Showing posts sorted by relevance for query 薬師堂. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query 薬師堂. Sort by date Show all posts

2018/01/27

Yakushi legends 03 Chiba Ehime

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. Yakushipedia - ABC-Index 薬師如来 .
. Yakushi Nyorai - Legends from the provinces .
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Yakushi Nyorai 薬師如来 and
legends from Chiba 千葉県 and Ehime 愛媛県


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来福寺 Raifuku-Ji - Tateyama

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安房郡 Awa district 鋸南町 Kyonan

Yakushi no reigen 薬師の霊験 the miracle of Yakushi
Once upon a time, a maidservant from a home in 房州勝山 Katsuyama, who was a strog believer in Yakushi Nyorai, braided her hair when suddenly flames and sparkles started to flutter all around. Her master got angry about this and threw her out. His rich wife begun to have one child after the other. In a dream the woman learned that she should start caring for ill people to end her fate of having too many babies. So she had a hospital built near the temple of Yakushi.


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Inzai Matsumushi, 印西市 松虫 - Matsumushidera 松虫寺

The temple has been founded in 745 on request of 聖武天皇 Emperor Shomu Tenno by 僧行基 Priest Gyoki Bosatsu.

Shichibutsu Yakushi 七仏薬師如来 Seven Yakushi Statues



千葉県印西市松虫 / Matsumushi, Inzai, 印旛 Inba, Chiba
七仏薬師 瑠璃光如来 Yakushi Ruriko Nyorai.
The statues were made in the early Heian period, probably by the same carver. The combination of six standing and one seated Yakushi is very rare.
One more is at 滋賀県の鶏足寺 Keisoku-Ji in Shiga.

松虫姫伝説 - Legend of Princess Matsumushi
The third daughter of Emperor 聖武天皇 Shomu Tenno, called Princess Matsumushi Hime, was very ill and her father sent her to this temple to pray to Yakushi Nyorai. She was eventually healed. She planted her tsue 杖 walking staff in the garden and from it a 銀杏 Gingko tree begun to sprout.
The temple and the village around it started to use her name, Matsumushi.

. Shichibutsu Yakushi 七仏薬師 / 七佛薬師 Seven Yakushi Statues .
- Introduction -


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成田市 Narita 遠山村 Toyama

tanishi タニシ mud snails
Once there was a great fire at the temple of Yakushi, but all the mud snails from the fields around came shielding the statue of Yakushi from being burned.
Since then the villagers of Toyama village do not harvest and eat these mud snails any more.
In effect, Yakushi had helped the mud snails !

. tanishi 田螺 / たにし mud snails .


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猿島郡 Sashima district 五霞町 Goka

Yakushi-ana 薬師穴 Yakushi cave
Once there lived 山姥 an old mountain hag in the Yakushi cave. She was lending zenwan 膳椀 bowls and trays to the needy.
Once a farmer broke one piece and did not bring another in exchange. Since then she stopped lending.

. zenwanbuchi 膳椀淵 "river pool for trays and bowls" .
in various regions of Japan

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- - - - - - - - - - Looking for Yakushi-ana I found

穴薬師古墳 Ana Yakushi kofun
茨城県猿島郡五霞町川妻 / Kawatsuma, Goka, Sashima District, Ibaraki



石室は幅2m、長さ7m、室内の高さは約2mで、中はひょうたん型になっており、中央部両側に長さ1.5m、30cm角の門石で前室と奥室とに区切られている横穴式石室である。 整形された軽石をレンガ積みして石室の側壁が作られたり、奥壁に五輪の塔のような板状の石があてられたり、特異な構造を示している。古墳時代終末期の造営と考えられるが関東地方には例が少なく、学術上貴重なものである。 1971(昭和46)年3月29日、茨城県の史跡に指定された。
(wikipedia)

. kofun jidai 古墳時代 burial mound period - 250 to 538 .

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ana no Yakushi 穴の薬師 Yakushi with holes, Yakushi for holes
at 熊谷市樋春 Hiharu, Kumagaya, Saitama


at the 川島薬師堂 Kawajima Yakushido Hall
Yakushi helps with the "holes" in your body, especially the eyed and mouth.
People try to grind a hole in a larger stone and bring it as offering to pray for healing.




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Yakushi Nyorai 薬師如来 and legends from Ehime 愛媛県

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今治市 Imabari

enko エンコ Kappa
Once a man named 与一 Yoichi went to work on his field near 薬師堂 the Yakushido Hall. A kappa showed up and asked him for a bout of Sumo wrestling.
Yoichi agreed, but first went into the hall and ate some of お仏飯 the food offerings. The Kappa had observed this and ran away in great fear.

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Once a man was late coming home from his work at the town hall. A woman with her hair combed in the Shimada style came toward him and invited him:
"Let's go to the Yakushi Hall and have some fun!"
He went home and told his family: "I am going to the Yakushi Hall now, but first give me some water!"
His daughter thought this was strange, gave him some tea and did not let him go.
In such a case, it is never good to give drinking water to a bewitched person.


. shimada 島田 Shimada-style hair - Introduction .


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城辺町 Johen

The statue of Yakushi Nyorai at 若宮神社 Wakamiya Jinja is from the time of Sakuragi Ho Shinno 桜木法親王, who passed here with his entourage and a high priest had carried the statue on his back, when it fell down. Once a priest came from 別府 Beppu and wanted to carry it back home, but he just could not pass the gate. The priest grumbled a lot and went back home, but he died soon after.
All people who want to take this statue away will only live for a short while after.

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松山市 Matsuyama

ikuji no juhoo 育児の呪法 spells to bring up a baby
Mumbling inoko inoko 犬の子 "child of a dog" helps to calm a crying baby.
(A pun with yoi ko, to be a good child.)
If a baby cries all night, it is good to paint a cock and make this an offering to
O Yakushi sama 尾薬師様 (Yakushi with a tail, another pun with the honorable  O御),


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西条市 Saijo

Yakushi San takes away warts, and helps mothers to produce milk for their babies.
After making a wish and getting help, the person has to paint an octopus as an offering.


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四国中央市 Shikoku Chuo Town

. ibotori 疣取り / イボ取り / いぼとり take away warts .
It is best to pray to 水神 Suijin the Water Deity and to Yakushi for healing. If healed, one has to bring offerings.
For Suijin it is grains of rice, for Yakushi it is matsu no fuguri 松のふぐり pine cones.
The number must be the number of the age of this person.

There are more than 30 places in Ehime related to deities taking away warts, Yakushi Nyorai is one, so is Jizo Bosatsu.


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宇和町 Uwacho

. Yamadaya manjuu 山田屋 饅頭 Manju Buns from Yamada .
善福寺 Temple Zenpuku-Ji 薬師堂 Yakushi-Do - 山田薬師如来


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- reference : Nichibun Yokai Database -

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. Yakushipedia - ABC-Index 薬師如来 .

. Yakushi Nyorai - Legends from the provinces .

. Yakushi Nyorai Pilgrimages 薬師霊場巡り - Introduction .


. O-Mamori お守り Amulets and Talismans .

. Japan - Shrines and Temples - ABC List .


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2014/09/02

Aizu Yakushi Pilgrims

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Aizu Wakamatsu 会津若松 Yakushi Pilgrims 薬師参り
Fukushima

Most pilgrimages to Yakushi Nyorai are to 12 temples, because of
The 12 Vows of Yakushi Nyorai.
. Yakushi Nyorai Pilgrimages 薬師巡り Yakushi Meguri .
- Introduction -

Aizuwakamatsu (会津若松市 Aizuwakamatsu-shi)
is the main town in the Aizu region of Fukushima Prefecture.
It is located in the western part of Fukushima Prefecture, in the Southeast part of the Aizu basin.

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Aizu Go Yakushi 会津五薬師 Five Yakushi temples

Statues of Yakushi Nyorai are only present at Shojo-Ji and at the Kami-Unai Yakushi Do, both statues are from the Heian period. They are located in the four directions (and the center) of the pilgrimage.
They have all been founded by priest Tokuitsu in the Heian period with the vow to bring peace and prosperity to the region.

More temples founded by Tokuitsu are listed here.

. Priest Tokuitsu 得一 徳溢 .
天平宝字4年(760年) - 承和2年(835年)/ (781? - 842?)

The five Yakushi temples have been founded by Tokuitsu in 807.
The statues are all from carved from keyaki ケヤキ zelkova wood.

- - - Legend knows this:
In former times the area around the volcano, Mount Bandaisan 磐梯山 in Aizu, had been cursed with thick fog by a monter. The sun was hardly to be seen and no crops would grow. People became ill and died.
So the court in Kyoto sent Kukai Kobo Daishi to help with his magical power. He dispelled the monster and healed the farmers, crops would grow again. He had vowed to make five statues of Yakushi Nyorai, but was soon called back to the court in Kyoto and could not fulfill his vow. So he entrusted Tokuitsu with the job.
There is no proof that Kukai really went to Aizu, though. Now all the five Yakushi Temples of Aizu belong to the Shingon sect 真言宗寺院.

. Kobo Daishi, Kukai 弘法大師 空海 . - . (774 - 835)



gobutsu Yakushi Nyorai 五佛薬師如来

- reference : www.aizue.net/jyunrei
- reference : ibabun.com/aruku


. Legends of the Heian Period (794 to 1185) 平安時代の伝説 .

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center - Shoojooji 勝常寺 Shojo-Ji
瑠璃光山 -
湯川村大字勝常字代舞1764



One of the oldest Buddhist temples in the Tohoku region, Shojo-ji was founded by High Priest Tokuichi in 807. The existing "Kodo" Hall, reconstructed in 1398, is known as the "Aizu Central Yakushido." All Buddhist images enshrined here date back to the temple's founding. It is rare that so many early-Heian-period Buddhist images are well preserved at one place.
© www.pref.fukushima.jp



source : blogs.yahoo.co.jp/kominguokuaizu

- Details of the temple
- source : www.aizue.net

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East - Enichiji 慧日寺 Enichi-Ji
磐梯町大字磐梯字本寺上4950

丈六薬師如来

- quote
Enichi-ji Temple was established by Tokuitsu-daishi who diffused Buddhism in Aizu. It is the oldest temple among those whose established ages are identified in Tōhoku region. A plan to reconstruct the temple at the historical site was forwarded, as the ancient Kondō Hall was reestablished in 2008 and has become a symbolic building in Bandai Town.
- source : www.aizu-concierge.com

See the article below about Kukai Kobo Daishi, priest Tokuitsu and the fighting with the Emishi people in the Tohoku region by the imperial government in Kyoto.


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West - Kami Unai Yakushi Doo 上宇内薬師堂 Kami-Unai Yakushi Do Hall
調合寺 - 瑠璃光山

会津坂下町大字大上字村北

One of the buildings of temple 高寺の「高寺三十六坊」. But temple 高寺 later fell into decline and only temple 調合寺 survived.
Now there is a statue of Amida Nyorai.
Nearby temple 浄泉禅寺 takes care of this one too.

The Yakushi Hall has been founded by Tokuitsu in 807. The Statue is a keyaki wooden statue of 1.67 meter hight.


source : blogs.yahoo.co.jp/kominguokuaizu


The statue of a seated Yakushi had been restored in 1958. It is 2 meters high.
It is now in a special museum in the temple compound.

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North 北山薬師 Kitayama Yakushi
Taishooji 大正寺 Taisho-Ji

北塩原村大字北山字寺ノ前4590

Also called  "漆大正寺"
Kobo Daishi Kukai founded the Kitayama Yakushido Hall 北山薬師堂, where the standing statue of Yakushi Nyorai was venerated.
During 1558 - 1569 the temple was taken over by the 浄土宗. In 1600 It was taken back by the Tendai sect due to the protection of priest 常海.
During the years 1596 - 1614 the Gamo clan took care of the temple.

Mine no Yakushi 峯の薬師 "Yakushi on the mountain peak"
Famous for  "二つ児参り".

The main festival is on September 8/9, with a mikoshi palanquin parade through the village.

The first son of the lord Gamoo Hideyuki 蒲生秀行 Gamo Hideyuki (1583 - 1612), Kamechiyomaru 亀千代丸 was very weak, so his father came here to pray with him. On the way back he placed the boy on a large boulder by the roadside and what do you know . .. he got better in an instant. So this stone is now called



kosodate ishi 子育て石 stone for child rearing


- quote
Gamo Hideyuki - Gamō Hideyuki
Hideyuki was the son of Gamô Ujisato 蒲生氏郷 and inherited his father's fief at Aizu (420,000 koku) in 1596.
He was a Christian, and transferred to Utsunomiya in Shimotsuke province in 1598, thereby suffering a loss of income to 180,000-koku. It is not clear why Hideyoshi moved the young Hideyuki, but he may have hoped that by moving the experienced Uesugi Kagekatsu to Aizu in Hideyuki's place, Tokugawa Ieyasu's regional supremacy would be offset.
Hideyuki supported Tokugawa during the Sekigahara Campaign, and while he saw little fighting nonetheless received Aizu (600,000 koku) as a reward.



His son Tadasato succeeded him in 1612.
When Hideyuki's 2nd son Tadamoto died, the Gamô line came to an end.
- source : wiki.samurai-archives.com


- reference : www.aizue.net/sityouson

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South - Nodera Yakushi 野寺薬師 "Yakushi in a temple in the wilderness"
Jikooji 慈光寺 Jiko-Ji - 広沢山慈光寺

会津若松市門田町堤沢字上村
会津若松市門田町大字堤沢709

It used to be on the top of mount 屯台平山


source : ibabun.com/aruku65

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なゝくさや明日は野寺の初薬師
nanakusa ya asu wa nodera no hatsu-yakushi

gruel of seven herbs for spring -
tomorrow at the lone temple
first ceremony of the Healing Buddha

Matsuoka Seira 松岡青蘿(1740-1791)
ttp://www.geocities.jp/haikunomori/chuko/seira.html


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Aizu Wakamatsu Juuni Yakushi Mairi 会津若松 - 十二薬師巡り 12 Yakushi temples

01 - Enichiji 慧日寺 Enichi-Ji (see above : East)

02 - 北山薬師 Kitayama Yakushi (see above: North)
Taishooji 大正寺 Taisho-Ji

第三番中禅寺薬師如来(中禅寺・88㎝・寄木造り)

04 - Shoojooji 勝常寺 Shojo-Ji (see above: Center)
瑠璃光山 -

第五番定徳寺薬師如来(一木造り)

06 - Kami Unai Yakushi Doo 上宇内薬師堂 Kami-Unai Yakushi Do Hall (see above: West)
Mine no Yakushi 峯の薬師 "Yakushi on the mountain peak"
調合寺 - 瑠璃光山

第七番杉薬師如来(薬王寺・桂材一木造)Yakuo-Ji
第八番田子薬師如来(常福院・漆箔・寄木造)
第九番中田薬師如来(弘安院)
第十番延命薬師如来(延命寺)Enmei Yakushi Nyorai / Enmei-Ji

11 - Nodera Yakushi 野寺薬師 "Yakushi in a temple in the wilderness"
Jikooji 慈光寺 Jiko-Ji (see above: South)

第十二番高田薬師如来(薬師寺)Yakushi-Ji


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会津ころり三観音 Aizu Korori San Kannon
Three Kannon statues to grant a sudden death

大沼郡会津美里町根岸の 弘安寺(中田観音)- Kooanji 弘安寺 Koan-Ji
河沼郡会津坂下町塔寺の 恵隆寺(立木観音)- Eryuuji 恵隆寺 Eryu-Ji
耶麻郡西会津町野沢の 如法寺(鳥追観音)- Nyohooji 如法寺 Nyoho-Ji

- - - More in the WIKIPEDIA !


. korori Kannon ころり観音 / コロリ観音 Kannon Bosatsu granting a sudden death .

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East - Enichiji 慧日寺 Enichi-Ji

- quote
ENICHIJI IN THE HEIAN PERIOD
In the absence of written records, we cannot be sure when or by whom Enichiji was established. Its two major founding legends claim that it dates from the beginning of the ninth century; and while temples commonly exaggerate their own antiquity, the discovery of ninth-century pottery in remains of Enichiji buildings suggests that the traditional date is not far off the mark.



Enichiji's founders, whoever they may have been, built their temple at the foot of Mt. Bandai, a mountain viewed as sacred in local folk belief. The kami (deity) of the mountain was worshipped at BANDAI SHRINE, now located at the site of the Heian temple's central complex.
Under its original name of Iwaki or Iwahashi shrine, it appears in the early tenth-century Engi Shiki as a government-sanctioned institution. By this time it is likely that the shrine and Enichiji had formed a close partnership--a common phenomenon in pre-modern Japan, when "Buddhism" and "Shinto" were not clearly distinguished, and temples and shrines often shared the same precincts.

Enichiji's close relationship to the mountain kami is suggested by one of its two founding legends, an account that appears in the nineteenth-century Shinpen Aizu Fuudoki. The legend also suggests that the temple was regarded as a holy site that protected the region against illness, famine, and other natural disasters:

At one time an evil spirit lived on Mount Bandai, called at that time the Mountain of Pestilence. The evil spirit destroyed the local rice crops, and if that were not bad enough, a lake suddenly materialized at the foot of the mountain, inundating the houses built there. The imperial court in Kyoto heard about the matter and in 807, dispatched the Shingon Buddhist master Kuukai to reverse the disasters.

For ten days, Kuukai performed an ascetic regimen in a village nearby. His practice drove off the evil spirit. Kuukai then renamed the mountain Bandai, and built a temple at its foot to ward off further disaster. Choosing the exact spot through divination, he constructed the temple, enshrining images of the Buddha YAKUSHI, the bodhisattvas Nikkou and Gakkou, and Buddhist guardian figures--the Four Heavenly Kings and the Twelve Generals. Kuukai was then rewarded with a manifestation of the mountain kami, whom he named Bandai Myoujin (Bandai Myojin).

A more commonly-accepted story claims that the temple was founded in 806 by TOKUICHI, a monk from the Nara temple Koufukuji who is also credited with establishing several other temples in the area around the same time. The Kuukai legend probably originated in later years, when the temple became affiliated with the Shingon school. We cannot verify Tokuichi's founding role, but a monk or monks from one of Japan's central Buddhist institutions may in fact have established the temple in cooperation with local notables.

Like other provincial Buddhist temples, Enichiji may have been a vehicle for extending government power to remote locations. Wary of religious institutions not under its own control, Japan's imperial government in Kyoto incorporated existing provincial shrines and temples into its own systems, or established new ones to "convert" local people and lay claim to their loyalty. Enichiji was not a large temple in comparison to temples in Kyoto or in Nara, the eighth- century capital; but it was large enough to have been expensive to build. Moreover, the central image of Yakushi at Enichiji's nearby sister temple of SHOUJOUJI, thought to be a twin of Enichiji's central image, is an early Heian figure of great sophistication. The elegance of the gilt-wood image suggests that it was made by skilled artists, perhaps from the same atelier as sculptors of similar images in powerful Kyoto and Nara temples. Although the evidence is very sparse, it points to the involvement of the court or court-sponsored Buddhist institutions in Enichiji's founding.

Another possible source of support was the regional notable class, composed of both indigenous families and officials dispatched by the court who had settled in the area. The conflicts between local families and powerful newcomers were sometimes settled by establishing common religious institutions, where local deities shared space with those who had come from outside. In any case, once Enichiji was established, local support was crucial to its existence. Local histories such as the Fuudoki list lay representatives of the temple who were allocated income from temple holdings at the end of the twelfth century, presumably in return for protecting temple interests. Enichiji's long period of prosperity--at least through the twelfth century and perhaps even longer than that--suggests that local support was quite powerful indeed.

The founding of Enichiji and other Aizu-region temples in the early Heian period may have had a military purpose. During the eighth and ninth centuries, the imperial court made war on the Emishi, people who resisted its control, and pushed them further and further northward. The Emishi fought back fiercely in the Touhoku regions to the north of Aizu. Tagajou, the capital of Mutsu (Aizu's province), was one center for campaigns against the Emishi. The Aizu region does not seem to have been a battle site, but it supplied the court's armies, and a ninth-century mokkan (record written on a strip of wood) recounts the service of Aizu soldiers at Tagajou. Although armies under the command of the legendary hero Sakanoue Tamuramaro largely brought the Mutsu Emishi under control in the early ninth century, they held out for some time in the province of Dewa, just over the mountains north of Aizu.

Under the circumstances, it must have seemed sensible for the court and their local allies to construct Buddhist temples in strategic regions such as Aizu. For one thing, converting the Emishi to Buddhism helped to pacify them, since Japanese Buddhism was bundled in a cultural package that engendered a peaceful agrarian life and obedience to central authority. In addition, Buddhist temples served as court outposts, often serving local government functions. It may be legend, not fact, that several Aizu temples were founded in the first decade of the ninth century by Tokuichi, a representative of the central power structure. But the kernel of truth in the legend, perhaps, is that central authorities sponsored temple construction in Aizu to shore up government power in a crucial region.

What role did Enichiji play in the political and economic life of the Aizu people? In the absence of definitive evidence we cannot be sure, but several artifacts in the temple's possession--described in Shinpen Aizu Fuudoki but unfortunately now lost--suggest what this role may have been.

According to the Fudoki, Enichiji held four gold seals, all said to have been issued by the imperial court--three of them in the ninth century and one in the late eleventh. The seal issued during the reign of the Emperor Junna (r. 823-833) is inscribed "seal of Amarue village"-- designating, perhaps, an as-yet unidentified village in the Aizu region. The historian Takahashi Tomio explains that the holder of a village seal had to be a district or village official, indicating that the temple performed some local government functions. Another artifact described in Fuudoki that indicates the temple's public authority is a stick nine sun eight bu in length (one sun = approximately 1.2 inches; one bu = 1/10 sun). About five sun of the stick is notched to make a ruler in a standard length for the period. Enichiji's possession of this type of ruler, used in government land surveys, suggests that the temple supervised the distribution of land in the surrounding area.

As a religious institution, Enichiji centered its rituals on Yakushi, the Buddha of healing. The practical aspects of a healing cult made the worship of Yakushi popular in the Nara monasteries, and easy to spread northward. One of Enichiji's sources of power, perhaps, was that its main object of worship soothed the fear of disease. In the Heian period, moreover, Enichiji adopted tantric Buddhism, with its emphasis on magic and ritual and its natural appeal to people of all social classes.

Although tantric practice affected almost all Buddhist institutions in Japan in the Heian period, it is largely associated with the Tendai and Shingon schools, introduced into Japan from China at the beginning of the ninth century. Tendai and Shingon soon came to rival the formerly-dominant Buddhist schools located in several great monasteries in Nara. . . . The new schools both expanded their influence into the Touhoku region, and Enichiji probably affiliated with one or the other in mid-Heian-- Tendai initially, perhaps, and later Shingon.

Enichiji prospered throughout the middle and late Heian periods. A medieval painting depicts the temple in its days of glory. During the eleventh and twelfth centuries, however, another complex of politico-religious power was arising further to the north. This was the famous HIRAIZUMI, home to the regional warlords Northern Fujiwara and their temple Chuusonji, a center of Pure Land Buddhism--the worship of AMIDA. No doubt the Northern Fujiwara wanted to extend their influence to Aizu but they do not seem to have done so before the end of the twelfth century. In the Kamakura period, some religious sculpture--such as the Amida image at GANJOUJI in Kitakata -- followed the Hiraizumi style, but that does not seem to have been the case in Heian times. The political and religious power of Enichiji probably stalled the extension of even the cultural influence of Hiraizumi.

If this was so, how did Enichiji hold out against the powerful Fujiwara warlords? One way was to make an alliance with other warlords, and apparently this is what the temple did. Under the leadership of Joutanbou, who commanded Enichiji's soldier-monks, the temple combined forces with a warrior family called the Jou.

Although Enichiji's soldiers had once opposed the Jou -- defeating their efforts to extend their power into Aizu in a war in the late tenth century -- by the 1170s the threat of Hiraizumi power seems to have brought the former enemies together. In 1172 the head of the Jou family commended seventy-five villages of a shouen in Echigo province to Enichiji. Unfortunately this alliance placed Enichiji on the wrong side of a military rivalry that culminated in civil conflict, the GENPEI WAR of 1181-1185. According to evidence from the war tale Heike Monogatari and Gyokuyou, the diary of the courtier Kujou Kanezane, the combined forces of the Jou and Enichiji were overcome in 1182 by warriors under the leadership of Kiso Yoshinaka of the Genji clan. Here is how the Heike describes the final battle:

. . . the Genji made a gradual approach. At a signal, the seven [Genji] bands merged into one, shouted a great battle cry all together, and whipped up the white banners they had kept in readiness. The Echigo warriors blanched. "There must be hundreds of thousands of them. What shall we do?" they said in a panic. Some were driven into the river; others were chased over cliffs. Those who survived were few; those who perished were many. Enemy weapons felled Yama no Tarou of Echigo, Joutanbou of Aizu, and all the other famous warriors on whom Nagashige [the Jou leader] had relied most heavily. (McCullough, tsl., The Tale of the Heike, page 223.)

This, according to standard accounts, was the beginning of Enichiji decline. After their victory in the Genpei War made the Genji under Minamoto Yoritomo the paramount military power in Japan, Yoritomo placed the Aizu region under the control of his followers. Did Enichiji then lose its holdings as is sometimes claimed? It seems unlikely that it did, since the medieval painting provides evidence of Enichiji prosperity throughout later ages.
- source : www.cs.csustan.edu

Aizu History Project
A team of historians and computer specialists from the University of Aizu (Aizu-Wakamatsu, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan) and from Applied Cad/Art (Eugene, Oregon, USA) is developing educational software on Japanese history, focusing on the Aizu region.
- source : www.cs.csustan.edu


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. Pilgrimages to Fudo Temples 不動明王巡礼
Fudo Myo-O Junrei - Fudo Pilgrims - INTRODUCTION .



. Japan - Shrines and Temples - ABC .


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2023/03/14

Ioji Fudo Shirahata

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. Japan - Shrines and Temples - Index .
. Buddhist Temples and their Legends .
. Adachi 100 Fudo Temples 足立百不動尊霊場 Pilgrimage .
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Iooji 醫王寺 / 医王寺 Io-Ji, Shirahata
金輪山 Konrinzan 威光院 Iko-In 醫王寺 Ioji
さいたま市南区白幡2-16-8 / Saitama city, Minami ward, Shirahata

The main statue is 大日如来 Dainichi Nyorai.
This statue was probably made by 弘法大師 Kobo Daishi.
The 不動尊座像 seated statue of Fudo Myo-O is to the right of it.
To the left of the main hall is Yakushi Do 薬師堂, a hall for Yakushi Nyorai.

The date of the founding is not clear.
The temple was founded by the ancestor of 金子内匠 Kaneko Takumi,
named Kurobei 九郎兵衛.


薬師堂 The Hall for Yakushi Nyorai.

The Main Gate

A large stone memorial

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Also on the following pilgrimages :

. Kita Adachi 88 Fudo Temples 北足立八十八ヵ所霊場 . - Nr. 40

. Adachi 12 Yakushi Pilgrimage . - Nr. 05

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- - - - - Reference of the Temple
- source : google
- reference source : tesshow -
- reference source : hanaetabi.fc2web.com/hudou/index ... -
- reference source : nippon-reijo.jimdofree ... -



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This Temple is Nr. 73 of the
. Adachi 100 Fudo Temples 足立百不動尊霊場 Pilgrimage .

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. Temples with legends .

. Kita Adachi 88 Fudo Temples 北足立八十八ヵ所霊場 .

. Japanese Legends - 伝説 民話 昔話 – ABC-List .

. Japan - Shrines and Temples - Index .

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- - #iooji #ioji #shirahata #adachifudo #busoo #busou -
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2022/01/22

Gyoki Bosatsu Legends

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. Japanese Legends - 伝説 民話 昔話 – ABC-List .
. Buddhist Temples and their Legends .
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Gyooki Bosats, Gyōki 行基菩薩 Gyoki Bosatsu

. Gyoki Bosatsu (668 -749) - Introduction .
The great priest Gyoki Bosatsu is well known for his activities
at the construction of the Great Buddha of Nara, 奈良の大仏.

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. Japanese Legends - 伝説 民話 昔話 – ABC-List .


....................................................................... Aichi 愛知県  
知多郡 Kita district 南知多町 Minami-Kita town

.The statue of Yakushi Nyorai at 医王寺 the temple Io-Ji .




....................................................................... Kagawa 香川県 
綾歌郡 Ayauta district 坂出町 Sakaide town - 福江町 Fukue town

. ryuujo 竜女と伝説 / 龍女 Ryujo - a female dragon and Gyoki Bosatsu .




....................................................................... Kochi 高知県  
長岡郡 Nagaoka district 西豊永村 Nishi-Toyonaga village

. The 薬師堂 Yakushi Do Hall in Nishi-Toyonaga .
and the tsue 杖と walking staff of Gyoki Bosatsu.
豊楽寺薬師堂 Temple Buraku-Ji, Yakushi-Do




....................................................................... Kyoto 京都府  
Kyoto 京都市 Kyoto city

. Miroku Bosatsu 弥勒菩薩 .
Once 行基菩薩 Saint Gyoki Bosatsu performed special purification rituals near a lake.
Suddenly Miroku Bosatsu 弥勒菩薩 appeared.
The lake used to be called 御泥池 "Honorable muddy pond".
But since then it was called 菩薩池(ミゾロ) Mizoro Pond.
みどろがいけ Midorogaike, みぞろがいけ Mizorogaike, 深泥ケ池 Mizorogaike

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Kyoto 東大和市 Higashi-Yamato city

. Senju Kannon 千手観音 Legends about Kannon with 1000 arms .
During the reign of 嵯峨天皇 Emperor Saga Tenno (786 - 842) priest 弘法大師 Kobo Daishi passed 山口村 the village Yamaguchi.
There he saw an old man with white hair resting under a tree. The old man said:
"I am the master of this mountain. When 行基菩薩 Gyoki Bosatsu passed here,
he made a statue of 千手観音 Senju Kannon.
The statue was exposed to wind and weather, so please build a hall for it here."
Kobo Daishi walked around the forest, found the statue and build a hall for it.
. Kōbō Daishi Kūkai 弘法大師 空海 - 伝説  Kobo Daishi Kukai Legends .




....................................................................... Nagano 長野県  
小県郡 Chiisagata district 長和町 Nagawa town

Once upon a time a priest (they say it was 行基菩薩 Saint Gyoki Bosatsu) came to the village
and wanted to eat musubi むすび rice balls, but one fell down.
It changed and became a the seed of a chestnut.
The villagers planted it and it became a great chestnut tree.
But then it dried up and the tree does not exist any more.




....................................................................... Nagasaki 長崎県  
長崎市 Nagasaki city

. sesshobashi 殺生橋 the murder bridge .
and kaikoo 怪光 Kaiko, a mysterious light.




....................................................................... Nara 奈良県  

. Todaiji 東大寺 Temple Todai-Ji and the Daibutsu 大仏 .

During the construction of the Hall for daibutsu 大仏 the Great Buddha in Nara
行基菩薩 Saint Gyoki Bosatsu was bullied by the carpenters,
so he used his prayer beads to teach them a lesson.
They could not work any more and called for Gyoki to come back.
He healed them and they asked him to get some stones for the building.
Now Gyoki used his power to have the rocks from 六甲山 Mount Rokkosan fly to Nara.




....................................................................... Osaka 大阪府  
四条畷市 Shijonawate city 南野 Minamino

. amagoi 雨乞いと伝説 Legends about rain rituals .
At Tatsuoji - Ryubiji 竜尾寺 the Temple Ryuo-Ji (Dragon Tail Temple)
they keep the tail of a dragon as a special temple treasure.
Around 730, when the local villagers were suffering from a drought, 行基菩薩 Saint Gyoki Bosatsu held a rain ritual.
In no time it begun to rain and the tail of a dragon fell from the sky.
This tail was kept as a special treasure in 竜尾寺 the Temple Ryubi-Ji.
. ryuu, ryū 龍 竜 伝説 Ryu - dragon legends .




....................................................................... Shizuoka 静岡県  

About 100 years ago, the Hall where the statue of 阿弥陀如来 Amida Nyorai,
made by 行基菩薩 Saint Gyoki Bosatsu, was venerated, needed repair work.
So the statue of Amida Nyorai was taken to another temple during that time.
On the night when the statue was moved, a fire occured.
The hall could be repaired and all was fine afterwards.

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Shizuoka 磐田郡 Iwata district 二俣町 Futamata town

. Tengu 天狗と伝説 Tengu legends "Long-nosed Goblin" .
Tengu and Gyoki Bosatsu at 光明山 Mount Komyosan




....................................................................... Tokushima 徳島県  

Gyoki Bosatsu ギョウキボサツ
Once a trader had loaded his horse with shiosaba 塩鯖 / 塩さば salted mackerels,
when a traveller came and asked to have one fish to eat.
The trader got angry and passed on.
When the traveller started reciting a prayer, the horse could not move any more.
Now the trader realized that this was a powerful priest and gave him the fish.
The priest then recited another prayer and the horse could move on.
- A similar story :
. Saba Daishi 鯖大師 "Mackerel and Kobo Daishi" .




....................................................................... Yamagata 山形県  
西村山郡 Nishimurayama district 朝日町 Asahi town

oonuma 大沼 Onuma, the great swamp
On top of 大沼山 Mount Onuma is a Shrine in honor of 行基菩薩 Saint Gyoki Bosatsu.
Behind the Shrine is a swamp called Onuma 大沼 "Great Swamp".
On the water are many small birds swimming or been blown by the wind.
Some can even swim against the wind. Their exact number is 66. Gyoki also prayed to them.
On the lake is also a great black tree trunk floating.
If it becomes invisible, there will be strange things happening in the land.

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- reference : Nichibun Yokai Database -

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. Temples with legends .
. Japanese Legends - 伝説 民話 昔話 – ABC-List .

. Japan - Shrines and Temples - Index .

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- - ##gyooki #gyokibosatsu #行基 #ギョウキボサツ #mirokubosatsu -
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2019/04/08

Yakushizakura Cherry

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. Yakushipedia - ABC-Index 薬師如来 .
. Yakushi Nyorai - Legends from the provinces .
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Yakushizakura 薬師ザクラ / 薬師桜 Cherry Blossom Yakushi




At the Yakushido Hall from the temple 瑞龍院 Zuiryu-In.
山形県西置賜郡白鷹町高玉字薬師堂 / 1071 Minowada, Shirataka, Nishiokitama District, Yamagata

The tree is about 15 m high and has a diameter of 8 meters.
The cherry type is called エドヒガン Edohigan, Edo Higan sakura

The temple has been founded in 1453 by the local Daimyo 伊達持宗 Date Muramune (1393 - 1496).
Legend knows that there was another old Sakura tree colse by, dating back to 1200, to Sakanoue Tamuramaro, named
釜ノ越ザクラ Kamanokoshi zakura

- reference source : hitozato-kyoboku.com...

- 釜ノ越ザクラ -
山形県西置賜郡白鷹町高玉


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- CLICK for more Photos !

薬師堂の境内にあるエドヒガンは天然記念物
- reference source : sp.jorudan.co.jp/hanami... -

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- Further Information -



Cherry blossoms at
. Arai Yakushi Baishoo-In 新井薬師 梅照院 .


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. Sakurado Yakushi 桜堂薬師 / 櫻堂薬師 .
佐久羅宮神社(櫻宮神社) Sakuramiya Jinja

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. Yakushipedia - ABC-Index 薬師如来 .

. Yakushi Nyorai - Legends from the provinces .

. Yakushi Nyorai Pilgrimages 薬師霊場巡り - Introduction .


. O-Mamori お守り Amulets and Talismans .

. Japan - Shrines and Temples - ABC List .


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2017/01/05

Gofunai temples 14 and 15

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. Gofunai 御府内八十八ヶ所霊場 88 Henro Temples in Edo .
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Nr. 14 - Fukuzooin 福蔵院 Fukuzo-In

- 白鷺山 Shirasagizan 福蔵院 Fukuzo-In 正幡寺 Shoban-Ji
中野区白鷺1-31-5 / 1 Chome-31-5 Shirasagi, Nakano
Shingon Sect : 豊山派



This temple was founded in 1521 by priest 頼珍 Yoriyoshi.
The main statue is 不動明王 Fudo Myo-O.
The main hall had been rebuilt in 1960, the 鐘楼堂 bell tower in 1963

Related to the shrine 鷺宮八幡神社 Sagi no Miya Hachimangu. The temple name Shirasagizan (White Heron) comes from this relationship.

In the compound is a group of special statues :


福蔵院の十三仏 Jusanbutsu - the 13 Buddha statues
They protect the souls of those passed-away on the journey in the Nether World
and also babies and children as they grow up until the age of 13 (juusan).
8 of the statues were made between 1666 and 1685. The other 5 had been destroyed and are made in 1769 on behalf of 27 pious people.

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- ご詠歌 - chant of the temple 常楽寺 Joraku-Ji in Shikoku :
常楽の岸にはいつか到らまし 弘誓の船に乗り遅れずば
Jōraku no kishi ni wa itsuka itaramashi kuzei no fune ni noriokurezuba


- 朱印 - stamp of the temple :


- Homepage of the temple
- source : tesshow.jp/nakano


. Introduction of Yakushi Nyorai and Kannon Bosatsu .

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- - - - - #edohistory - - - - -

. Juusanbutsu 十三仏 Jusanbutsu - 13 Protector Buddhas .


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Nr. 15 Nanzooin 南蔵院 Nanzo-In

- 瑠璃光山 Rurikozan 南蔵院 Nanzo-In 医王寺 Io-Ji
練馬区中村1-15-1 / 1 Chome-15-1 Nakamura, Nerima ward
Shingon Sect : 豊山派



This founding of the temple is not clear. It was maybe founded by a priest named 良弁僧都 Roben around 1520,
or much earlier around 1360.
The main statues are 薬師如来 Yakushi Nyorai, 不動明王 Fudo Myo-O and 聖観世音 Sho-Kannon.
In the 薬師堂 Hall for Yakushi there are many ema 絵馬 votive plaques since the year 1805.
The statue of Yakushi Nyorai is secret and only shown every 33 years.
The statue of Kannon is from the Fujiwara period, with some repairs in later times.
Roben made the statue for Yakushi Nyorai. Later in a dream Yakushi Nyorai gave him the recipe for a medicine called 白龍丸 Hakuryumaru, which is a cure for many things and so he could help many people. The distribution of this medicine was stopped in 1877, with the advent of Western medicine.
The 閻魔堂 Enmado Hall of the King of Hell was built with the intention to pray for good health and has a collection of 1000 small statues of Jizo Bosatsu for this purpose.



The 鐘楼門 bell tower gate
was probably constructed in the middle Edo period. It has a bell with an inscription dating to 1715.

The 南蔵院薬師堂 Yakushi Hall and the 南蔵院閻魔堂 Enma Hall (Enma, King of Hell) have been constructed in 1753.

Related to the shrine 中村八幡神社 Nakamura Hachiman Jinja.

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- ご詠歌 - chant of the temple 國分寺 Kokubun-Ji in Shikoku :
薄く濃くわけわけ色を染めぬれば 流転生死の秋の紅葉ば
Usuku koku wakewake iro o somenureba rutenshyōshi no aki no momiji ba


- 朱印 - stamp of the temple :


- Homepage of the temple
- source : tesshow.jp/nerima

豊島八十八ヶ所 - Nr. 15 of the Toshima pilgrimage.

. Introduction of Yakushi Nyorai and Kannon Bosatsu .

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- reference : 御府内八十八 福蔵院 -
- reference : 御府内八十八 南蔵院 -

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- Koya San in Wakayama 和歌山 高野山 -

- Kobo Daishi Kukai 弘法大師 空海 (774 - 835) -

. Gyoki Bosatsu 行基菩薩 (668 - 749) Saint Gyōki .

. Shikoku Henro Temple List 四国遍路  .

. Gofunai 御府内八十八ヶ所霊場 Pilgrimage to 88 Henro Temples in Edo .
- Introduction -

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. Join the Updates of Facebook ! .

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. Japan - Shrines and Temples - ABC .

. Welcome to Edo 江戸 ! – The Edopedia .

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2022/09/27

Jirinji Fudo Angyo

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. Japan - Shrines and Temples - Index .
. Buddhist Temples and their Legends .
. Adachi 100 Fudo Temples 足立百不動尊霊場 Pilgrimage .
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Jirinji 慈林寺 Jirin-Ji, Angyo
医王山 Iozan 宝厳院 Hogon-In 慈林寺 Jirinji
宝厳院本堂不動堂 Hogon-In Fudo Hall
川口市安行慈林954 / Kawaguchi city, Angyo, Jirin

The Temple has two statues of 不動尊 Fudo Myo-O,
but one is in repair.

宝厳院薬師堂 Hogon-In Yakushi Hall

According to records from 1793, the temple was established in 741
on request of 聖武天皇 Emperor Shomu Tenno (701 - 756).
行基菩薩 Saint Gyoki Bosatsu built Yakushi-Do 薬師堂, a Hall for Yakushi Nyorai.
It was revitalized by 文徳天皇 Emperor Montoku Tenno (826 - 858).
In 1642, the Tokugawa government added more land.
Together with the Yakushi Temples 領家光音寺 Ryoke Koon-Ji and 朝日薬林寺 Asahi Yakurin-Ji
it became one of the three great Yakushi Temples in Edo.
The compound is very large with many buildings.

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shuin 朱印 stamp / Yakushi Nyorai

omamori お守り amulets

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Also on the following pilgrimage :

. Musashi no Kuni 武蔵国八十八ヶ所霊場 Pilgrimage to 88 Temples . - Nr. 88

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- - - - - Reference of the Temple
- reference source : tesshow -
- reference source : hanaetabi.fc2web.com/hudou/index ... -
- reference source : nippon-reijo.jimdofree ... -



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This Temple is Nr. 31 of the
. Adachi 100 Fudo Temples 足立百不動尊霊場 Pilgrimage .

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

. Temples with legends .

. Kita Adachi 88 Fudo Temples 北足立八十八ヵ所霊場 .

. Japanese Legends - 伝説 民話 昔話 – ABC-List .

. Japan - Shrines and Temples - Index .

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2018/02/02

Yakushi legends 05 Ibaraki Ishikawa

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Yakushi Nyorai 薬師如来 and
legends from Ibaraki 茨城県 and Ishikawa 石川県



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Yakushi Nyorai 薬師如来 and legends from Ibaraki 茨城県


菖蒲沢薬師如来坐像 Shobusawa Yakushi Nyorai
At 菖蒲沢薬師堂 the Yakushi hall
Also known as one of the Four Yakushi of Tsukuba, 筑波四面薬師.
本尊の薬師如来坐像のほか,同時期の作と思われる脇侍像と十二神将の一部,そして仁王像2体が現存している。
古くから「筑波四面薬師」と呼ばれて信仰を集め,かつては大変な参拝者で賑わったといわれる。平成20年から21年にかけて修理作業の際に胎内から見つかった墨書から,貞享4年(1687)に東光寺29代目別当寛泉によって作られた像であることが判明した。
菖蒲沢
- reference source : city.ishioka.lg.jp/page... -

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Yakushi statue at the temple 妙香寺 Myoko-Ji
稲敷郡美浦村土浦
- reference source : edu.pref.ibaraki.jp/board/bunkazai... -

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延命寺の薬師如来 Enmei-Ji Yakushi Temple
茨城県坂東市岩井4365番地 Bando town
- reference source : city.bando.lg.jp/sp/page...-


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東村 Higashi

Yakushida 薬師田 / ヤクシダ "Fields of Yakushi"
Near the bus stop 釜井駅 Kanai along the national road Nr. 294 there is a 薬師堂 Yakushi-Do hall. About 3000 square meters of former field land was used, but soon people begun to get ill in the neighbourhood.
Later the land was sold and a mansion was built there

- - - - - Yakushiden / Yakushida 薬師田 as a place name in
秋田県秋田市飯島薬師田 Akita
福島県福島市在庭坂薬師田 Fukushima
小川の薬師田 Ogawa no Yakushida

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水戸市 Mito

keikeigami ケイケイ神,seki no kami 咳の神 Kami of coughing
Near the Yakushi of 台町 Daimachi there is a sanctuary for the God of Coughing. It used to be a shrine for Lord Kuruma Tsunatada, 車斯忠丹波守 (? - 1602) . He had lost a battle and tried to hide in the forest, but could not suppress his coughing, was found out and killed.
After his death, he became the local 百日咳の神 "God of the whooping cough".


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筑波郡 Tsukuba 谷田部町 Yatabe

katame no sakana 片目の魚 fish with one eye
The 弁天池 Benten Pond in the village of 島名 Shimana was also called Yakushi no Ike 薬師の池 and Yakushi was venerated there.
If a person with eye disease would release a living fish in the pond, he got cured, but the fish in the pond lost one eye.


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牛久市 Ushiku

byooninda 病人田 / ビョウニンダ - byooninbatake 病人畑 "sick field"
There was a "sick field" dedicated to Yakushi at the temple 薬師寺 Yakushi-Ji. It was cursed and nobody wanted to use it for farming.
Once some young farmers decided to use it together, but soon some of their members died from mysterious accidents, so they stopped the project.

稲敷の病人田(忌地)伝説 Legend of the Byoninda of Inashiki
- reference : nichibun yokai database -


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Yakushi Nyorai 薬師如来 and legends from Ishikawa 石川県



龍護寺 Ryugo-Ji
The statue is 120 cm high.
羽咋郡志賀町酒見門前67
- reference source : pref.ishikawa.lg.jp/kyoiku/bunkazai... -


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羽咋郡 Hakui district 富来町 Togi

ryuutoo 龍燈 "dragon lantern"
The statue of Yakushi in the 高爪山の観音堂 Kannon Hall of Takatsumeyama was carved from some wood found on the beach.
Every year during the festival on the 18th day of the 8th lunar month, there is a strange "dragon lantern" light seen from the large tree in the compound.



. ryuutoo, ryūtō 龍燈 Ryuto, "dragon lantern" .
a light phenomenon at the Ariakekai sea in Kagoshima, Kyushu, and other areas, in the evening hours.

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輪島市 Wajima

funetogame no Yakushi 船咎め薬師 Yakushi blamed for ship traffic
The Yakushi who was responsible for safe ship traffic off the coast once caught the anger of the boatmen. So they cut off his left arm.



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. Yakushi Legends from Iwate 岩手県 -Tohoku .


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- reference : Nichibun Yokai Database -

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. Yakushi Nyorai - Legends from the provinces .

. Yakushi Nyorai Pilgrimages 薬師霊場巡り - Introduction .


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