23 Jan 2016

HEIAN - Hoijin and Konjin deities

http://japanshrinestemples.blogspot.jp/2016/01/hoijin-konjin-deities.html

Hoijin Konjin deities

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. Legends and Tales from Japan 伝説 - Introduction .
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hooijin 方位神 deities of the directions

. Tozai Nanboku 東西南北 - the Four Directions .
- Introduction - including :

The Four Animals, Shijuu (四獣,四聖獣)
or
Four Gods, Shijin (四神)
Four Guardians of the Compass
The four protectors of Edo and Kyoto
Feng Shui 風水 Chinese Geomancy
The Asian Lunar Calendar  

The Nine Heavens, kyuuten 九天 Kuten : nine Directions, nine skies
九重天 kyuuchuu no ten

The 12 Heavenly Generals 十二神将

Kimon, the "Demon Gate 鬼門" in the North-East

happoo yoke shugo, happoo fusagari 八方塞がり
amulets for protection in all eight directions

Daishogun Hachi Jinja 大将軍八神社 - Kyoto
Daishogun is the deity of the Pole Star

yugyoojin 遊行神 deities who walk freely in all directions:
planet Venus deity
pole star deity

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- quote -
方位神(ほういじん)とは、
九星術から生じた神々で、その神のいる方位に対して事を起こすと吉凶の作用をもたらすと考えられた。
方位神は、それぞれの神に定められた規則に従って各方位を遊行する。吉神のいる方角を吉方位といい、凶神のいる方角を凶方位という。

平安時代には、自分が行こうとする方角が凶方位である場合に、一旦他の方角へ行ってから目的地へ向かう方違え(かたたがえ)が盛んに行われた。現在では、凶方位を犯すことによる災厄を避けるため多くの寺院・神社で「方位除け(方除け・八方除け)」の祈祷・祈願が行われる。

The good deities 吉神
歳徳神(恵方)Toshitokujin (Eho) Deity of the New Year
歳禄神 Sairokushin
月徳合 Gettokugo
歳枝徳 Saishitoku
歳徳合 Tokutokugo
生気 Seiki
奏書 Sosho
天道 Tendo
天徳 Tentoku
天徳合 Tentokugo
博士 Hakushi

The bad / wild deities 凶神 / 神殺
天一神 Tenichijin
金神(大金神・姫金神) Konjin- Daikonjin, Hime Konjin
八将神 Hasshojin
太歳神(普段は吉神)Daisaijin
大将軍 Daishogun
太陰神 Daionjin
歳刑神 Saigyojin
歳破神 Saihashin
歳殺神 Saisetsushin
黄幡神 Obanjin
豹尾神 Hyobishin
- source : wikipedia -

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Konjin, Konjin Sama  金神, 金神様 deity of metal



- quote -
Konjin "Tutelary of metal,"
an itinerant kami originating within the cult of Onmyōdō (Yin-Yang divination), associated with varying compass directions in space, and believed to change position in accordance with the year, lunar month, and the season. Konjin's current location in space at any given time was considered an unlucky or taboo direction, since the deity was thought to be violent and to delight in bloodshed and curses. Based on these ideas, lucky and unlucky days and directions were postulated in accordance with astrological calender terms and concepts. Unlucky days and directions were linked to the observance of directional interdictions (kataimi) and the practice of "changing directions" (katatagae) to avoid the most strongly tabooed directions on a given day. Tabooed directions, in turn, were those in which the malicious deities Konjin, Ten'ichijin, and Taihakujin were currently located. According to the practice of katatagae, if plans for travel indicated that the final destination lay in the direction of one of the above tabooed deities, the traveler would avoid that direction by setting out a day early in a different direction; after spending the night at a temporary site, he or she would start out the next day for the final destination, thus avoiding direct travel in the line of taboo.

The practice of katatagae was frequently observed among Heian-period nobles, and as it became an integral part of their lives, it worked to strongly restrict everyday movement and activities. Beliefs in the "seven deaths of Konjin" stated that violating Konjin's tabooed direction would result in the death of up to seven close relatives; strong interdictions were thus placed on various areas of life, including the construction and renovation of houses, moving one's residence, public works construction, and leaving on journeys.

The cult of Konjin was also associated with Onmyōdō's geomantic concept of two "demon's gates" (the northeast and southwest directions on the compass), and the belief arose that Konjin was particularly formidable when it resided in one of these quarters as "Kimon Konjin" (Konjin of the Demon's Gate"). Of the two, the more dangerous and feared was the "front demon's gate" (omote kimon) located in the northeast direction called ushi-tora, although the "back demon's gate" (ura kimon) located in the southwest direction (hitsuji-saru) was also the subject of taboo.

Since the mountain Hieizan was located in the northeast direction from the new capital of Kyoto, the mountain was selected as the site for Saichō's temple Enryakuji, as a device to protect the capital from unlucky influences emanating from that quarter. Both within the capital city and at the temple, it became customary to avoid building gates, earthen storehouses, toilets and baths in the northeastern quarter of one's residence, and protruding corners were also chamfered in that quarter, a practice which was linked to the placement of "demon-faced tiles" (onigawara) on the northeastern corners of buildings as an exorcism of the "demon's gate."

Other practices associated with the demon's gate include the avoidance of marriage with a person from the northeastern direction, and the avoidance of cutting trees or moving stones in the northeastern quarter of one's residence. In response to the cult, professional sorcerers proliferated, performing exorcisms to eliminate various Konjin banes.
- source : Kawamura Kunimitsu, Kokugakuin, 2005 -

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- quote -
Konjin (金神 "God of metals") is an itinerant kami (spirit) from Onmyōdō (a traditional Japanese cosmology and system of divination based on the Chinese philosophies of Wu Xing (Five Elements) and Yin and yang). Konjin is associated with compass directions, and said to change position with the year, lunar month, and season.

Konjin's momentary location in space at any given time is considered an unlucky direction, because this kami is stated to be particularly violent and said to punish through curses. Based on this, a calendar with astronomical and geomantic direction relations was created, which included interdictions (kataimi). A practice known as katatagae (changing directions) is used to avoid the worst directions on a given day, usually where Konjin, Ten'ichijin, and Taihakujin are currently located.

Katatagae was favored among Heian-period nobles and it became a part of their daily lives. The construction and renovation of houses, moving one's residence, public works construction, and traveling was strongly influenced by katatagae.

Konjin was said to be at tremendous power when residing as "Kimon Konjin" (Konjin of the Demon's Gate") at the two "demon's gates" (the northeast "front" gate called omote-kimon and the southwest "back" gate called ura kimon). Kyoto was supposedly protected from any bad influences by placing Saichō's temple Enryakuji at Mount Hieizan.
- source : wikipedia -

Konkookyoo 金光教 Konkōkyō The Konjin cult
was particularly widespread in the province of Bitchū (Okayama Prefecture), and it was based on that traditional cult that the man named Konkō Daijin (Akazawa Bunji) founded the new religion of Konkōkyō late in the Edo period. Konkō Daijin took upon himself the title "living kami Konkō Daijin" and proclaimed that Konjin was not a kami of evil and curses, but in fact the deity Tenchikane no Kami, the "world's 'parent kami' and savior of humankind." According to Konkō Daijin, one could gain the aid of the kami merely through "having faith in the kami out of a sincere mind" (jitsui teinei shinjin), and without the need to perform magical spells or abide by calendrical and directional interdictions.
In the mid-Meiji period, Deguchi Nao was influenced by Konkōkyō to preach that "Ushitora no Konjin" was the kami who would rebuild and restore the world.
- source : konkokyo.or.jp/eng -

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. Legends and Tales from Japan 伝説 - Introduction .

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Gunma 群馬県 - 伊勢崎市 Isezaki

金神様はおっかない神様。どこにいるかわからない。言う事を聞かない人のことを俗に「あいつは金神様だ」などというくらい因業な神様。

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Gunma 前橋市 Maebashi

Hime Konjin sama 姫金神様
姫金神様は荒神様(コウジンサマ)よりなお悪く祟る。年によっている所が違い、暦を見なくてはわからない。金神様がいると知らずに引っ越して、障ったこともあった。障りをさけるまじないもある。


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Gunma 太田市 Ota

金神様は目が不自由で、おっかない神様。間違った事をすると許さない。

姫金神様は目・耳・口が不自由。祟られると何をしても除けることができない。

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Shizuoka 静岡県

Konjinsama 金神様 Konjin sama
金神様は荒い神様で様々な祟りを為す。屋敷や畑地の土を動かす場合には、必ず禰宜を頼んで拝んでもらう。金神除けは庚申の日に行なう。金神様を確かめずに 不用意に杭を打ったりすると、歯痛や病気になったりする。そういうときは御嶽行者に頼む。伊勢猿田彦神社のお砂は金神除けに効果がある。

. Sarutahiko densetsu 猿田彦伝説 Sarutahiko Legends .

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Tokushima 徳島県 美馬郡 Mima district

aragami no tatari 荒神のたたり curse of the wild deity
ある女性が肋膜に水が貯まり、どうしても治らない。祈祷師に拝んでもらうと金神さんを汚していることがわかり、早速汚れたものを捨て金神様を祀ると数日で水がたまらなくなった。さらに、荒神さんを清めて祀りなおすと病人は全快した。

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Yamanashi 山梨県 秋山村 Akiyama

Rokuksan 六三 Rokusan Deity
If someone has pain without any known cause, it might be due to Rokusan.
Dividing the age of the ill person by 9, and if the rest of the number falls on a number of Rokusan, then he is the cause of the illness.

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Yamanashi, 北都留郡 Kitatsuru district

hime konjin sama no tatari ヒメコンジン様の祟り the curse of Hime Konjin Sama
In every house there are for Konjin Sama deities to protect the premises.
One of them is the female "Princess Konjin Sama".
If people do not treat her spot nicely, someone will get ill. They must keep the area around the outside toilet clean and not cut branches from the Silverberry (グミの木 gumi, Elaeagnus pungens), otherwise their lower back will start aching the same day due to the influnce of Rokusan.
If someone gets ill in this way, he has to seek help from a person performing rituals for Hime Kojin Sama and Rokusan or learn a special spell to repeat secretly to himself.

. Rokusan 六三 伝説 legends about Rokusan, Deity of Illness .

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- source : nichibun yokai database -

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- Reference : 日本語
- Reference : Konjin


. Shrine, Shinto Shrine (jinja 神社) - Introduction .

. kami 神 Shinto deities - ABC-LIST - .

- #hoijin #fourdirections #konjin -
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- - - - -  H A I K U  - - - - -

夏菊の土金神に香を焚く
natsugiku no tsuchi Konjin ni koo o taku

the earth
of summer chrysanthemums - burning incense
for the Konjin deity


松村蒼石 Matsumura Soseki (1887 - 1982)




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堪へたりし金神奈落寒明けぬ

稲垣きくの Inagaki Kikuno

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22 Jan 2016

HEIAN Legends - Rokusan Six Three


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. Japanese legends and tales 伝説 民話 昔話 - Introduction .
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Rokusan 六三 伝説 legends about Rokusan, Deity of Illness
六三さま / ろくさんさま Rokusan Sama
Rokuzoosama ロクゾウサマ Rokuzo Sama
rokusan 六算 / ロクサン / ロクサン様 Rokusan Sama


- - - - - 六三さまという神様
Rokusan Sama is a deity that resides in various parts of the body, but in a different part every year.
This part is prone to become sick.
There are various types of changes of Rokusan:
tobi rokusan トビロクサン "jumping Rokusan"
tsuki rokusan 月ロクサン Rokusan changing every month
toshi rokusan 年ロクサン Rokusan changing every year

六三 = 無産 musan - without possession or job
活動が停止した部分、弱くなった部分、を除くご祈祷。これが六三除です。

Rokusan is related to
. kyuusei 九星 Kyusei, the "nine special stars" .
.

If people do not take precautions and rituals to prevent Rokusan Sama to become violent
(Rokusan no yaku 六三の厄), this part will become very sick.
It is best to perform some rituals (Rokusan yoke 六三除け) before going to see a doctor for treatment.
rokusan yoke no majinai ロクサンヨケの咒 / 呪 spell against Rokusan



When someone is ill the cure is made by "calculating with six" (roku san 六算).
First take the age of the ill person and divide it by 9. The remaining number can now be equated to a part of the body.
(Example: someone is now 31, divided by 9, remains 4. He might be affected with a breast or stomach disease.)

1 and 3 are lower legs, 2 and 6 are the sides, 4 is the breast or stomach,
8 are the thighs, 5 and 7 the shoulders, 9 is the head.
The sides vary for men and women.

During a pregnancy, it is best to use an amulet near the points 2, 6 and 8 to pray for easy delivery.
People either apply the amulet directly to their own body or get a paper figure with the numbers from a temple and apply it here.

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立正院 きしもじん Rissho-In Kishimojin
福島市松川町信夫隠5番地 Fukushima
- reference source : kishimojin.net -


. Kishimojin 鬼子母神 Kishibojin .
Karitei, Kangimo

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- - - - - ABC List of the prefectures :

.................................................................. Fukushima 福島県 ....................................................................
Nishi Aizu, 檜枝岐村 Hinoemata

rokusan yoke ロクサン除け "preventing Rokusan"
Rokusan yoke no majinai ろくさんよけのまじない
People who know a lot of spells (咒 / 呪 ju, majinai) do not go hunting very often.
Once a man had a stomach ache and asked an old man for a ritual to prevent Rokusan. He was healed quite fast.
Sometimes it helps to rub an abacus on the painful spot and say a spell, sometimes it helps to plaster an amulet with some pine resin (松脂 matsuyani) over the painful spot.


.................................................................. Gunma 群馬県 ....................................................................

rokusan 六算 / ロクサン calculating with SIX - ( soomi rokusan 惣身六算)

When someone is ill the cure is made by "calculating with six".
First take the age of the ill person and divide it by 9. The number can now be equated to a part of the body.
1 and 3 are lower legs, 2 and 6 are the sides, 4 is the stomach, 8 are the thighs. 5 and 7 the shoulders.
If the healing was successful, offering of Tofu, sekihan 赤飯 red cooked rice and dango 団子 rice balls were made to the 稲荷 Inari deity.

. Kappa and Tōfu kozō 豆腐小僧 Tofu Kozo, The Tofu Boy .



.................................................................. Niigata 新潟県 ....................................................................

In various parts
rokusan ni ataru ロクサンに当る to be attacked by Rokusan
This could happen for various reasons:
During the days of doyo 土用 Doyo :
If people would dig a hole or hammer a nail.
If people had to enlarge the space for the family graves,

. doyoo 土用 Doyo days .
four times a year, the 18 days before each changing to the next season,


.................................................................. Saitama 埼玉県 ....................................................................
戸田市 Toda

When getting ill, it is best to perform a ritual for Rokusan before visiting a doctor.


.................................................................. Tochigi 栃木県 ....................................................................
粟野町 Awano

rokusan sama ロクサン様 Rokusan sama
Pain in the shoulders, lower back or legs is often simply called "Rokusan".
People visit elders who perform rituals to get rid of Rokusan (rokusan sake ロクサン避け).
They also offer special kinds of Tofu bean curd to Rokusan or the Family Deity (ujigami sama 氏神様).


masudoofu マス豆腐 / 枡豆腐 Tofu in a wooden Masu cup.


. Kappa and Tōfu kozō 豆腐小僧 Tofu Kozo, The Tofu Boy .


.................................................................. Yamanashi 山梨県 ....................................................................
秋山村 Akiyama

If someone has pain without any known cause, it might be due to Rokusan.
Dividing the age of the ill person by 9, and if the rest of the number falls on a number of Rokusan, then he is the cause of the illness.
金神様に失礼なことをしたのであてられたので、3差路に段を作っておがんでわびる。

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Yamanashi, 北都留郡 Kitatsuru district

hime konjin sama no tatari ヒメコンジン様の祟り the curse of Hime Konjin Sama
In every house there are for Konjin Sama deities to protect the premises.
One of them is the female "Princess Konjin Sama".
If people do not treat her spot nicely, someone will get ill. They must keep the area around the outside toilet clean and not cut branches from the Silverberry (グミの木 gumi, Elaeagnus pungens), otherwise their lower back will start aching the same day due to the influnce of Rokusan.
If someone gets ill in this way, he has to seek help from a person performing rituals for Hime Kojin Sama and Rokusan or learn a special spell to repeat secretly to himself.


. Konjin, Konjin Sama  金神, 金神様 deity of metal .

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- reference : nichibun yokai database 妖怪データベース -

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中野不動尊 Nakano Fudo Son Temple
福島市飯坂町中野 / Iizakamachi Nakano, Fukushima


- source : nakanofudouson.jp -

- - - - - One of the
. Aizu Wakagaeri Goshiki Fudo son 会津若がえり五色不動尊 .

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. Legends about Kobo Daishi Kukai - 弘法大師 空海 - 伝説 .

. Japanese legends and tales 伝説 民話 昔話 - Introduction .

- Yookai 妖怪 Yokai Monsters of Japan -
- Introduction -

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. Join the friends on Facebook ! .

- #rokusan -
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Posted By Gabi Greve to Heian Period Japan on 1/20/2016 02:17:00 pm

FUDO - Nakano Fudo Fukushima


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. 36 Fudo Temples in Tohoku .  
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Nakano Fudo Son 中野不動尊
福島県福島市 - - 中野不動尊
Sekizaka-28 Iizakamachi Nakano, Fukushima

. 東北三十六不動尊霊場
36 Fudo Temples in Tohoku .
 

- quote -
When we visit Nakano Fudoson we are seeing one of Japan's three famous Fudosons.
Fudo are the great fearful-looking mountain gods, and oracle who created a sacred fire, which continues to burn to this day in a votive light in an inner sanctuary of the cave.




Three Fudo Myo-O's names are Yakuyoke, Ganshu, and Mikazuki,
and the spirit of The Three Fudo assists in granting any serious wish.
- source : welcome-fukushima.com -


Yakuyoke Fudo 厄除不動 in the Main Hall 本堂

Ganshu Fudo 眼守不動 in the Kito Dono 祈祷殿



Mikazuki Fudo 三ヶ月不動 in Oku no In cave 奥の院 洞窟


child attendant of Fudo in the Cave

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o-mamori amulets


. amulet for Rokusan 六三 deity of illness .




shuin 朱印 stamp of the temple

- - - - - Homepage of the temple
- source : nakanofudouson.jp


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- - - reference 中野不動尊 - - -


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

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


. Narita Fudo 成田不動尊 .
Temple Shinshooji 新勝寺 Shinsho-Ji

. O-Mamori お守り Amulets and talismans from Japan . 

. Japanese Temples - ABC list - .


. 東北三十六不動尊霊場
36 Fudo Temples in Tohoku .
 
- #nakanofudofukushima -
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. Japan - after the BIG earthquake .
March 11, 2011, 14:46

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Posted By Gabi Greve to Fudo Myo-O - Introducing Japanese Deities at 1/15/2016 08:06:00 PM

17 Jan 2016

TEMPLE - Senyu-Ji Shikoku 58


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. Shikoku Henro Temple List .
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Senyuuji 仙遊寺 Senyu-Ji

. 四国お遍路さん Henro Pilgrims in Shikoku . - General Information -


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Nr. 58 - 作礼山 Sareizan 千光院 Senko-In 仙遊寺 Senyu-Ji
愛媛県今治市玉川町別所甲483/ Ehime, Imabara



Main statue is Kannon with 1000 arms 千手観世音菩薩

- quote
Senyūji - Hermit in Seclusion Temple
Built on the orders of Emperor Tenchi by the local ruler Ochi-no-Kami Okikimi in the 7th century. Legend states that in early history the hermit (sennin) ascetic Abō recited sutras here for forty years before mysteriously disappearing one morning. The honzon was carved by a pious girl and became the guardian Buddha of Emperor Tenchi. According to another legend, the honzon was brought from Ryūgū (the Dragon King's palace) under the sea like the legend at temple 39.

Kōbō Daishi made this the 58th temple on the pilgrimage and the Dōjō of esoteric disciplining (Kegyō). Local people call this temple Osarei (carving while prostrating yourself) because of the legend that the girl prostrated herself once after every cut of the knife while she was carving the honzon.

The temple is located at an elevation of 1, 300 ft (390 meters) on the top of the mountain. According to Frederick Starr, the Niō (28 Buddha figures) and the main Buddha are all attributed to Unkei.

Along the path to the temple, there are thirty-three statues of Kannon, each with an aspect corresponding to a particular temple on the 33 temple Saigoku Kannon Pilgrimage.
- source : www.shikokuhenrotrail.com


- Chant of the temple
たちよりて作礼の堂にやすみつつ  
六字を唱え経を読むべし
Tachi yorite sarei no dō ni yasumitsutsu rokuji o tonae kyō o yomubeshi



ryuutoo sakura hi 竜燈桜碑
Memorial stone for the Dragon Lantern hanging on a Cherry tree
every year on the 9th day of the 7th lunar month, when the 竜女 Female Dragon comes out of the sea.


Inuzuka Ike 犬塚池 Inuzuka Pond
文化4年(1807)に完成した溜池で、仙遊寺と栄福寺の使い役をした犬の供養池。




- Homepage of the temple
- source : 88shikokuhenro.jp/ehime


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source : jake ojisan blog

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. Fudō Myō-ō, Fudoo Myoo-Oo 不動明王 Fudo Myo-O
Acala Vidyârâja - Vidyaraja – Fudo Myoo .



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


The Five Great Wisdom Kings, Godai Myo-O - 五大明王
. The Five Great Elements of the Universe - 地水火風空の五大 .

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. - Two short Haiku Henro Trips, Summer 2005 - .

. - Photo Album from my visit - .


. 四国お遍路さん Pilgrims in Shikoku . - General Information

Koya San in Wakayama

Kobo Daishi Kukai 弘法大師 空海
(Kooboo Daishi, Kuukai)

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


Haiku and Henro:
.... . The Haiku Henro Pilgrimage  

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. Jizoo Bosatsu 地蔵菩薩 Jizo Bosatsu - Kshitigarbha .
- Introduction -


. Japan - Shrines and Temples - ABC .


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[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO . TOP . ] - - - - - #senyuji #senyuuji - - - - -
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Posted By Gabi Greve to Gokuraku - Jigoku on 1/16/2016 01:19:00 pm

PERSONEN - Manase Dosan Doctor

http://darumapedia-persons.blogspot.jp/2016/01/manase-dosan-doctor.html

Manase Dosan Doctor

[ . BACK to DARUMA MUSEUM TOP . ]
. - - - PERSONS - ABC - LIST of this BLOG - - - .
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Manase Doosan, Manase Dōsan 曲直瀬道三 Manase Dosan
(1507 - 1594)

He studied medicine with 田代三喜 Tashiro Sanki (1465 - 1537).
Together with 永田徳本 Nagata Tokuhon (1513 - 1630)
they were the sansei 三聖 three most famous doctors of their time.



He studied at the famous school

. 足利学校 Ashikaga Gakkō, The Ashikaga School .
Japan's oldest academic institution. It is located in Ashikaga city, Tochigi Prefecture ...
Founded ca. 832 in the Heian period by the poet Ono no Takamura 小野篁.

He studied Chinese Medicine but applied it individually to the needs of his patients, after taking the pulse and talking to the sick person.
. kanpoo 漢方 Chinese Medicine .

He never demanded money for his treatment and looked at the poor and the rich with equal diligence. He travelled a lot to various parts and patients in Japan.

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医の旅路はるか -曲直瀬道三とその師田代三喜篇
- - - 曲直瀬玄朔と聖医父曲直瀬道三篇

服部忠弘

A novel about "travelling in the footsteps of Doctor Manase"
He treated the Ashikaga Shogun, Lord Mori Motonari and even Oda Nobunaga. But always came back to treat the people of the cities where he passed.

足利将軍、毛利元就、信長も舌を巻いた室町・安土桃山期の天下一の名医、曲直瀬道三の足跡をたどる。

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- quote -
曲直瀬 道三(まなせ どうさん)
(永正4年9月18日(1507年10月23日) - 文禄3年1月4日(1594年2月23日))は、戦国時代から安土桃山時代の日本の医師。道三は号。諱は正盛(しょうせい)。字は一渓。他に雖知苦斎(す いちくさい)、翠竹庵(すいちくあん)、啓迪庵(けいてきあん)など。本姓は元は源氏、のち橘氏。今大路家の祖。日本医学中興の祖として田代三喜永田徳本などと並んで「医聖」と称される。養子[1]に曲直瀬玄朔。
- snip -
神麴の処方応用 shingiku treatment
日本で本格的な神麴の製剤と処方は戦国期で、他の本草とともに漢籍を参考にして道三独自の治験結果をよりどころとし、新たに実証的に精選されたもので、在 来のそれとの関わりは認められない。しかも道三流医術の普及により広く実地医療に役立つ神麴の処方応用例は当代医療を代表とする特色のある新技術ととして 評価される.
- - - More in the WIKIPEDIA !




神麴 shingiku treatment
Garland Chrysanthemum
In Traditional Chinese Medicine the herb corrects imbalances in liver and kidney function that cause issues with the eyes, and dizziness.
Garland chrysanthemum – which is known as Shingiku in Japan, Choy Suey Green in old Chinatown, Tong Hao in China, and Crown Daisy in England – is a healthy, edible plant native to East Asia.
- source : healwithfood.org -


- - - His main publications - - -
Benshō haizai itō (弁証配剤医灯)
Hyakufuku zusetsu (百腹図説)
Keiteki-shū (啓迪集)
Shinkyū shūyō (鍼灸集要)
Shinmyaku kuden-shū (診脈口伝集)
Shōshin-shū (正心集)
Yakushō nōdoku (薬性能毒)
Manase Dōsan zenshū (曲直瀬道三全集) Complete Works of Dosan


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Manase Dosan (the Elder) and leprosy
The aim of this paper is to describe the main features of Manase Dosan's (1507-1594) study and treatment of leprosy. Contrary to general medical opinion in the Middle Ages that leprosy was the result of divine retribution.
Dosan viewed leprosy as simply another disease and treated it accordingly from a medical perspective. Furthermore, the commonly held belief from the latter half of the 17th century onwards amongst Early Modern era doctors and also the general populace that leprosy was a hereditary disease, was not considered by Dosan.
The foregoing two points can be explained by his rational approach to medicine, plus the fact that leprosy at the time was widely prevalent amongst all areas of society, not just restricted to particular households. It is thus fair to say that Dosan's medical philosophy reflected the state of Japanese society during the transition from medieval to the Early Modern period. It should be noted, however, that Dosan's view that leprosy was caused by meat-eating and overindulgence in sex gave rise to a new, negative image of the disease, and in so doing tied in with the Early Modern era prejudices against "lust", "intemperance" and "laziness."
Nihon Ishigaku Zasshi. 1995
- source : National Center for Biotechnology Information -


Medical thought of Dosan Manase's early years. (1)
The meaning of the work "Toryu".

Dosan Manase was a famous Japanese doctor in the Muromachi era and was in the vanguard of the Goseiha school of Sino-Japanese traditional medicine. In his "Shinmyakukudenshu" we found an interesting account to explain the meaning of the word "Toryu", which was often found in the medical books written in Dosan's early years.
This word signifies "our school" in a general sense, but in this book Dosan used it with the additional meaning of his medical thought originating in Zhu dan xi who was a famous Chinese doctor in the Yuan age. In addition, he mentioned in the same book that Toryu was introduced from China into Japan by Dodo, succeeded by Sanki and propagated by himself.
Moreover our extensive investigation of other medical literature showed that Dosan, in his early years, tried to develop a system of medical thought on the basis of that of Zhu dan xi. This is worthy of note because it differs considerably from the stance adopted in Dosan's later years : while he valued Zhu dan xi, he referred to many medical books by various authors, and tried not to favour any particular school.
Nihon Ishigaku Zasshi. 1999
- source : National Center for Biotechnology Information -


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- quote
ein japanischer Arzt, der im Zeitalter der streitenden Reiche (戦国時代, Sengoku-jidai) auf die Entwicklung der Medizin in Japan einen entscheidenden Einfluss ausübte und neben Nagata Tokuhon und Tashiro Sanki zu den „Drei verehrungswürdigen Ärzten" (三聖, sansei) im Umbruch zur Frühmoderne zählt. Auf ihn geht die „Schulrichtung des späteren Zeitalters" (後世派, Gosei-ha auch 後世方派, Goseihō-ha) zurück.
- - - Leben
Manase hatte schon in der Kindheit seine Eltern verloren. 1516 trat er in den Shōkoku-Tempel (Shōkoku-ji), einen Zen-Tempel in Kyōto ein, wo er als Bettelmönch lebte. In dieser Zeit änderte er seinen Namen Tachibana (橘) zu Manase.
1528 ging er an die „Ashikaga-Schule", eine der ältesten akademischen Einrichtungen des Landes, in der man Konfuzianismus, chinesische Medizin, Kriegswissenschaften, I Ging usw. lehrte. Hier gewann Manase Interesse an der Heilkunde. Nach einer Begegnung mit dem berühmten Arzt Tashiro Sanki wurde er dessen Schüler und befasste sich vor allem mit den Lehren der chinesischen Mediziner Li Gao (李杲), alias Li Dōngyuán (李東垣, 1180–1251) und Zhū Dānxī (朱丹溪, 1281–1358).

1546 kehrte Manase nach Kyōto zurück und praktizierte als Arzt. Nach einer erfolgreichen Behandlung des Shōgun Ashikaga Yoshiteru gewann er weitere hochrangige Patienten wie die Kriegsherren Hosokawa Harumoto (細川晴元), Miyoshi Nagayoshi (三好長慶) und Matsunaga Hisahide (松永久秀) und großes Ansehen. Schließlich gründete er die „Aufklärungsakademie" (啓迪院, Keiteki-in). Die Behandlung von Mōri Motonari während eines Feldzuges führte zu der Schrift „Abendgespräche im Schnee-Feldlager" (雲陣夜話, Setsujin yawa). 1574 verfasste er sein bekanntestes Werk, die „Keiteki-Sammlung" (啓迪集, Keiteki-shū). Der Tennō Ōgimachi, dem er die Schrift nach einer Behandlung überreichte, beauftragte den Zen-Mönch Sakugen Shūryō mit einem Vorwort und gewährte Manase den Ehrennamen „Grünbambus Halle" (翠竹院, Suichiku-in). Unter den namhaften Patienten finden wir auch Oda Nobunaga, einen der mächtigsten Feldherren jener Zeit.

Manase zog hunderte von Schülern an, die seine Lehren und Schriften weit verbreiteten. Ob er, wie es in Briefen der Jesuiten heißt, im Jahre 1584 anlässlich einer Behandlung des italienischen Missionars Gnecchi-Soldo Organtino zum Christentum übertrat und sich taufen ließ, ist umstritten. Fest steht allerdings, dass eine große Zahl seiner Schüler christliche Taufnamen führte.

Manase starb 1594 im Alter von 88 Jahren, posthum ein weiteres Mal geehrt durch die Ernennung zum Hofarzt im zweiten Rang. Der von ihm adoptierte Neffe Gensaku (曲直瀬玄朔, Manase Gensaku, 1549–1632) und dessen Nachfahren setzten über Generationen Dōsans ärztliche Tradition fort.

Manase begann eine vorsichtige Loslösung von der vor allem durch die Klöster betriebenen chinesischen Medizin und strebte zugleich eine Systematisierung an. Seine oft ausführlichen Krankengeschichten belegen die starke Betonung der Rolle von Beobachtung und Erfahrung. In diesem Punkt bereitete er eine stärkere Eigenständigkeit der japanischen Medizin vor.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !


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- Reference - Japanese -
- Reference - English -

- - - #manasedosan #dosanmanase #tashirosanki - - -
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. - - - PERSONS - ABC - LIST of this BLOG - - - .

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HEIAN - Manyoshu

http://heianperiodjapan.blogspot.jp/2016/01/manyoshu-poetry-collection.html

Manyoshu Poetry Collection

- BACK to the Daruma Museum -
. ABC List of Heian Contents .
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Man'yōshū 万葉集 / 萬葉集 Manyoshu Poetry Collection
Collection of Myriad Leaves

Manyoo-Shuu, Manyo-Shu, Manyoo'shuu, Manyōshyū
Gedichtsammlung Manyoshu




- quote -
The Man'yōshū  万葉集, literally "Collection of Ten Thousand Leaves",
(see Name below) is the oldest existing collection of Japanese poetry, compiled sometime after 759 AD during the Nara period. The anthology is one of the most revered of Japan's poetic compilations. The compiler, or the last in a series of compilers, is today widely believed to be Ōtomo no Yakamochi, although numerous other theories have been proposed. The collection contains poems ranging from AD 347 (poems #85–89) through 759 (#4516), the bulk of them representing the period after 600. The precise significance of the title is not known with certainty.

The collection is divided into twenty parts or books; this number was followed in most later collections. The collection contains 265 chōka (long poems), 4,207 tanka (short poems), one tan-renga (short connecting poem), one bussokusekika (poems on the Buddha's footprints at Yakushi-ji in Nara), four kanshi (Chinese poems), and 22 Chinese prose passages. Unlike later collections, such as the Kokin Wakashū, there is no preface.
The Man'yōshū is widely regarded as being a particularly unique Japanese work.
- Translating the Name -
Although the name Man'yōshū literally means "Collection of Ten Thousand Leaves" or "Collection of Myriad Leaves", it has been interpreted variously by scholars. Sengaku, Kamo no Mabuchi and Kada no Azumamaro considered the character 葉 yō to represent koto no ha (words), and so give the meaning of the title as "collection of countless words". Keichū and Kamochi Masazumi (鹿持雅澄) took the middle character to refer to an "era", thus giving "a collection to last ten thousand ages".
The kanbun scholar Okada Masayuki (岡田正之) considered 葉 yō to be a metaphor comparing the massive collection of poems to the leaves on a tree. Another theory is that the name refers to the large number of pages used in the collection.
Of these, "collection to last ten thousand ages" is considered to be the interpretation with the most weight.
- snip snip -
- - - More in the WIKIPEDIA !




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- quote - Michael Hoffman
'It is I who rule' — Japan's 'Manyoshu' morning

What fun civilization is in its infancy! How bright and fresh the world looks at the dawn of consciousness! Listen:

Your basket, with your pretty basket,
Your trowel, with your little trowel,
Maiden, picking herbs on this hillside,
I would ask you: Where is your home?
Will you not tell me your name?

It was morning in Japan. Night — if night is a fitting metaphor for Neolithic prehistory — had been long, tens of thousands of years long. China, Egypt and Mesopotamia had thousands of years of civilization behind them; classical Greece had come and gone; classical Rome, long past its prime, was dying. Still, Japan slept on.

The pre-agricultural, preliterate, seemingly endless Jomon Period (circa 12,000 B.C. to circa 200 B.C.) evolved at last into the agricultural, still preliterate Yayoi Period (circa 200 B.C. to A.D. 250), without sparking a transformation dramatic enough to be called civilizing. Then, with startling abruptness, nudged by China via Korea, Japan awoke from its primeval slumbers.

The watershed event is the arrival, circa A.D. 405, of a Korean scholar named Wani. He brought to the imperial court the gift of letters — reading and writing. Chinese became the official language. Soon courtiers and nobles were steeped in Confucian and Buddhist learning. In 645, a palace revolution fused a multitude of independent clans into a quasi-Chinese-style state under the Emperor's divine but tender sovereignty. Its tenderness we gather from the poem just quoted, for its author is the fifth-century Emperor Yuryaku — who proceeds, very tenderly indeed, to introduce himself to the maiden:

It is I who rule
Over this wide land of Yamato (an ancient name for Japan);
It is I who reign over all.

Thus opens the glorious "Manyoshu," Japan's first, many say its best, poetry anthology. "Best" — meaning what? Beauty, shimmering beauty; and innocence, a rare innocence — rare because generally a culture that has risen to this level of linguistic mastery has already lost its innocence. Japan, having risen so very fast, hadn't.

"Manyoshu" ("Collection of Myriad Leaves") consists of 4,000-odd poems composed over three centuries, Yuryaku's being among the earliest, the latest dating to roughly 750, the height of Japan's first great era, the brilliant Nara Period (710-794).

Unlike later Japanese anthologies, the "Manyoshu" was not produced under imperial auspices. The editing process remains something of a mystery. Scholars speak of earlier poem collections that have not survived, so the "Manyoshu" may not have struck its contemporaries, as it does us, as genius bursting naked from a vacuum.

The poems are astonishing in their variety. There are short poems and long poems — a remarkable fact in itself, for the Japanese long poem, the choka, was soon afterwards to die out, leaving the short tanka to reign supreme. There are poems by emperors and courtiers, naturally, but also by ordinary people, the poor, the lowly

Cold and bitter is the night!
As for those poorer than myself . . .
how do you struggle through life?

— people whom later ages would scorn and ignore.

There are poems of joy and poems of grief, of travel and of domesticity, of love in all its myriad aspects and of nature — nature portrayed as only a newly awakened sensibility can portray her

You boatmen that come rowing ...
Ply not too hard your oars...
lest you startle into flight
the birds beloved of my dear husband!

— and we see here an impulse that over time came to seem inseparable from the Japanese consciousness, a reaching out to nature as the ultimate symbol of everything that makes life wonderful; or as the ultimate consolation when life turns sad past bearing

The cloud drifting over the brows
Of the hills of secluded Hatsuse —
Can it, alas, be she?

The poems span the emotional spectrum — or rather, not quite: Where, one wonders, is anger? Was "Manyo man" never angry? That seems unlikely. A better hypothesis is that he (and she, for many of the poets are women) thought anger unworthy of poetry — as was war, for though conscripted frontier guards march gamely to their distant postings

At the bidding of my great Sovereign
I set out as defender of the isle . . .

they sing no paeans to martial glory, lamenting instead the wrenching pain of leaving home

My mother picking up the hem of her skirt,
Stroked me with it and caressed me . .. 

A pity we have space only for snippets. Where to begin?

Today, taking my last sight of the mallards
Crying on the pond of Iware,
Must I vanish into the clouds!
- - - "Composed in tears,"
a marginal note laconically informs us, "when (a certain Prince Otsu) died by Imperial order on the bank of Iware Pond."


I gather shells and pebbles
For my darling at home,

sings Fujiwara Kamatari, the guiding hand behind the revolution of 645 and founder of the prepotent Fujiwara clan, power behind the throne for centuries to come. And who was his "darling at home?" A palace attendant named Yasumiko. Hear Kamatari's whoop of exultation when she consented to be his:

O, Yasumiko I have won!
Mine is she whom all men,
they say, have sought in vain.
Yasumiko I have won!"

Ranked among the greatest of the Manyoshu poets is Kakinomoto Hitomaro (late seventh, early eighth centuries):

Like the sea-tangle, swaying in the wave
hither and thither, my wife would cling to me . . .

His wife died:

I journeyed to Karu and searched the market place
where she was wont to go!
… But no voice of her I heard …
Alas, she is no more, whose soul
was bent to mine like the bending seaweed!

Grief makes happiness seem vain — or is it happiness that makes grief seem vain?

Instead of wasting thoughts on unavailing things,
it would seem wiser
to drink a cup of raw sake.

That's the spirit! It's one of the famous "Twelve poems in praise of sake" by Otomo Tabito (665-731). Have we room for one more?

Grotesque! When I look upon a man
who drinks no sake, looking wise —
how like an ape he is!"

- source : Japan Times, 2016 -

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- Reference in Japanese 万葉集 -
- Reference in English -

. Legends - Heian Period (794 to 1185) - Introduction .

. Japanese legends and tales 伝説 民話 昔話 - Introduction .

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. Join the friends on Facebook ! .

- #manyoshu #manyooshuu -
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16 Jan 2016

MINGEI - Mingei Cookie


[ . BACK to DARUMA MUSEUM TOP . ]
. Folk Toys and Food 郷土玩具 .
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Mingei Kukkii みんげいクッキー Mingei Folk Art Cookies
Folk Art Cookies with Icing


A book with folk art cookies from 47 prefectures, explanations and recipes for the icing レシピ本.



みんげいクッキー:
かわいくてなごむ47都道府県のほのぼの郷土玩具アイシング

Trigo e Cana トリゴエカナ






- source : torenta.tumblr.com/post -

Exhibition in Chiba 「おいしいみんげい」展
123ビルヂング1階 トリゴエカナスペース
千葉県市川市大和田2-16-1 / Ichikawa Chiba
屋号のトリゴエカナはポルトガル語で「麦と砂糖(Trigo e cana)」を意味する。





. Daruma Cookies だるまクッキー .
開運だるまクッキー Good Luck Daruma Cookie

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和モチーフのアイシングクッキーレシピ
長嶋清美






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- ABC - List of cookies from the Prefectures

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. . . . . . . . . . Fukushima 福島県




- source : rakuten.co.jp/meihann -

会津 笑顔の赤べこプリントクッキー Akabeko from Aizu

. akabeko あかべこ / 赤べこ Aka-Beko .


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. . . . . . . . . . Gunma 群馬県



幸運の白鹿だるま white deer Daruma



hakuroku daruma 白鹿だるま
The white deer is a messenger of the Gods.
This is an original Daruma from the Takasaki Gunma Daruma workshop
群馬県高崎で三代続くだるま工房「高崎だるま 真下輝永」.

. Gunma Folk Art - 群馬県 .

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. hakuroku, hakushika, shirojika 白鹿 white deer - Introduction .

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. . . . . . . . . . Hiroshima 広島県 




. shikazaru, shika saru 鹿猿 dear and monkey clay bell .

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. . . . . . . . . . Kochi 高知県



. kujiraguruma 鯨車 whale on wheels .


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. . . . . . . . . . Kyoto 京都




. manjuu kui ningyo 饅頭食い人形 boy eating Manju sweets .


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. . . . . . . . . . Okayama 岡山県



. Kibitsu Jinja Daruma 吉備津神社 だるま .


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. . . . . . . . . . Tokyo 東京




. inu hariko 浅草の犬張子 papermachee dogs from Asakusa .


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. . . . . . . . . . Yamaguchi 山口県



. tairyoo ningyoo 大漁人形 "great catch doll" .


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folk art cookies -
a special treat
for Christmas


Gabi Greve, January 2016


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. Reference .

. gangu 玩具 伝説, omochcha おもちゃ  toy, toys and legends .
- Introduction -


. Legends and Tales from Japan 伝説 - Introduction .

- - - #mingeicookie #cookiemingei - - - - -
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. Join the MINGEI group on facebook ! .  



. Regional Folk Toys from Japan .

. Folk Toys and Food 郷土玩具 .

. Tohoku after the BIG earthquake March 11, 2011

[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO . TOP . ]
[ . BACK to DARUMA MUSEUM TOP . ]

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Posted By Gabi Greve to Omamori - Japanese Amulets on 1/04/2016 06:02:00 am