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| Izusan Gongen 伊豆山権現 | ||||||
| KEY WORD : art history / iconography | ||||||
|  Also 
      called Hashiriyu Gongen 走湯権現. A deity associated with a hot spring which 
      wells up on Izusan 伊豆山, a hill of 166m in Shizuoka prefecture close to the 
      sea coast. A shrine was raised to the deity in the early 9c. In the late 
      Heian period anE Esoteric Buddhist mikkyou 密教 temple called Hannya-in 
      般若院 was built on Izusan. The sculpture of  Izusan Gongen that was the principal 
      image of Hannya-in survives. He originally held a mace shaku 笏 and 
      a halberd houbou 宝鉾. He wears a court hat, court robes, and kesa 
      袈裟 (Buddhist robes). This combination expresses particularly well the unity 
      of Buddhism and Shinto shinbutsu shuugou 神仏習合 (see *honji 
      suijaku 本地垂迹). In the Kamakura period, 
      Izusan became a mountain used for ascetic practice shugendou 
      修験道 (see *En no Gyouja 
      役の行者), and was linked with Hakone 箱根 as a pilgrimage destination, receiving 
      government patronage. Izusan remained well known as a shugendou sacred 
      mountain until the early Meiji period, when the site was made Shinto and 
      the Buddhist objects scattered. A Buddhist manifestation *honjibutsu 
      本地仏 of Izusan Gongen is the Thousand-armed Kannon *Senju 
      Kannon 千手観音.  | 
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(C)2001 Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. No reproduction or republication without written permission. 掲載のテキスト・写真・イラストなど、全てのコンテンツの無断複製・転載を禁じます。  | 
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