Kurumazaki: Kyoto’s “Cherry-Blossom Shrine”
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Many Varieties, Longer Season
Located in Ukyō-ku, Kyoto, Kurumazaki Shrine was once known as the “Cherry-Blossom Shrine.” A short walk from Kurumazaki-jinja Station on the Randen Arashiyama Line, the shrine is host to many visitors in spring who come to see the cherry trees in bloom.
The shrine commemorates one Kiyohara no Yorinari, a Confucian scholar of the late Heian period (794–1185) who was known for his erudition and his political acumen alike. After his death, numerous cherry trees, of which he was inordinately fond, were planted on the grounds where his mausoleum had been erected. These grounds have since been given over to this Shintō shrine, which had been fondly thought of as the “Cherry-blossom Shrine” since its establishment. It is said, however, that the shrine earned its present name as the result of an occasion when an oxcart transporting Emperor Gosaga (1220–72) to Mount Arashi was stopped in front of the shrine owing to its drag link breaking.
There are 40 cherry trees of some 15 varieties planted on the shrine grounds at present. The Kawazu cherry trees reach their optimal viewing time in early March, and the Yoshino and other cherry trees also bloom around this time, followed by the nioi-zakura trees, which, with their distinctive perfume, reach full bloom in late April. While known as a place where the cherry blossoms can be viewed for longer than many other places, visitor numbers reach a peak in late March, which is the blooming time for the so-called Keisen-zakura, named for Japanese painter Tomita Keisen (1879–1936), who contributed the tree to the shrine.
Offerings by Popular Entertainers, Too
In addition to hopes that Yorinari’s achievements will rub off on worshipers in the form of better scholarship, the shrine is also believed to offer benefits of “promises not being broken,” in accordance with the upright life led by Yorinari. It is thus popular with persons looking to pray for romance, marriage, or success in business. In a unique and renowned custom, so-called “prayer rocks,” a sort-of supposed “power stone,” are given out at the shrine office and taken home by worshipers to pray and make wishes on. Upon fulfillment of these worshipers’ wishes, said worshipers write expressions of gratitude on other rocks and leave them as offerings before the main shrine building.
Another recent development is the rise in popularity of a shrine for the performing arts on the grounds of the shrine proper. Dedicated to Ame no Uzume no Mikoto, a Japanese deity whose domain includes these arts, this shrine-within-a-shrine counts many persons involved in arts and entertainment among its devotees, and is home to many fence posts signifying their offerings. Some of these devotional posts are inscribed with the names of particularly popular entertainers, and fans frequently come to get photos taken next to these. It gives some an additional motivation for visiting this shrine during cherry blossom season.
Access: A short walk from either Kurumazaki-jinja Station on the Randen Arashiyama Line or Kurumazaki-jinja-mae stop on the City Bus or Kyoto Bus lines.
(Originally published in Japanese. Text by Fujii Kazuyuki; photos by Kuroiwa Masakazu and Fujii Kazuyuki, 96Box. Banner photo: Cherry blossoms bloom near the third torii of Kurumazaki Shrine.)
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