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Iwashimizu Hachimangū : ウィキペディア英語版
Iwashimizu Hachimangū

is a Shinto shrine in the city of Yawata in Kyoto Prefecture, Japan.
==History==
The shrine's Heian period connections with the Kyoto and the Imperial family date from its founding in 859 (''Jōgan 1'')〔Kanda, Christine Guth. (1985). ( ''Shinzō: Hachiman Imagery and Its Development,'' p. 41. )〕 when construction on its earliest structures commenced.〔Brown, Delmer ''et al.'' (1979). ''Gukanshō,'' p. 288.〕 Shrine tradition explains that Emperor Seiwa ordered the shrine to be built in obeisance to an oracle in which the god Hachiman expressed the desire to be near to Kyoto to watch over the city and the Imperial House of Japan.〔Ponsonby-Fane, Richard. (1962). ''Studies in Shinto and Shrines,'' p. 78.〕 This vision was reported by a Buddhist monk, Gyōkyō, who had a second vision which led to selecting the Otokoyama location where the shrine now stands.〔Kanda, ( p. 42. )〕 Like other Hachiman shrines, until 1868 Iwashimizu was actually a shrine-temple complex (''jingū-ji'') called dedicated to Buddhism as much as to ''kami'' worship.
The shrine became the object of Imperial patronage during the early Heian period.〔Breen, John ''et al.'' (2000). ( ''Shinto in History: Ways of the Kami,'' pp. 74-75. )〕 In 965, Emperor Murakami ordered that Imperial messengers were sent to report important events to the guardian ''kami'' of Japan. These ''heihaku'' were initially presented to 16 shrines including the Ōharano Shrine.〔Ponsonby-Fane, ''Studies,'' pp. 116-117.〕
The shrine's importance and influence grew in succeeding centuries; and its extensive landholdings led to modest conflicts with Minamoto no Yoritomo during the years in which the Kamakura shogunate was establishing itself. The shrine sought to maintain its traditional exemption from contributing to paying the costs of military forces.〔Maas, Jeffrey P. (1999). ( ''Yoritomo and the Founding of the First Bakufu: The Origins of Dual Government in Japan,'' p. 202. )〕 In time, the bakufu faded away; and the shrine endured.
''Iwashimizu Hachimangū'' and ''Ise Shrine'' were specified for in the Middle Ages.
* 1456 (''Kōshō 2, 3rd month''): Ashikaga Yoshimasa visited Iwashimizu Shrine; and all the officials of the ''Daijō-kan'' joined him in going there.〔Titsingh, ( p. 348. )〕
From 1871 through 1946, Iwashimizu Hachimangū was officially designated one of the , meaning that it stood in the first rank of government supported shrines. Other similarly honored Hachiman shrines were Usa Shrine of Usa in Ōita Prefecture and Hakozaki-gū of Fukuoka in Fukuoka Prefecture.〔Ponsonby-Fane, Richard Arthur Brabazon. (1959). ''The Imperial House of Japan,'' pp. 124-126.〕

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