Kunci Temple
Kunci Temple is a Taoist temple located in Longtian Village, Luye Township, Taitung County, Taiwan. The temple grounds contain a reconstructed Shinto shrine known as Luye Shrine.
History
Longtian sits on a large flat plain along the Beinan River. At the beginning of Japan's rule over Taiwan, the region was largely unpopulated. In 1912, the newly-founded acquired a tract of land as part of the government's "immigration village" program. The company wanted to use the land to plant sugarcane and persuaded a couple families from Niigata Prefecture to move to Longtian. Inside the new village, a small Shinto shrine was built on October 17, 1923 and moved to the current site of Kunci Temple on November 13, 1931. The shrine was dedicated to Prince Yoshihisa and the, which is common for shrines in Taiwan.When the Japanese left in 1945, the Han people that had been living nearby migrated into Longtian. They brought their former village's Tudigong and placed him in the old Shinto shrine to worship. In 1953, Lin Wending moved to Longtian from Taipei and brought statues of Mazu and the Buddha to his home. At the time, Longtian residents had to travel very far to Cihui Temple to worship non-tutelary deities, so Longtian residents often visited Lin's house to worship instead. Therefore, in 1958, Lin and other villagers visited Cihui Temple and brought a copy of their Queen Mother of the West to Longtian. A small bamboo temple with a statue was completed on 1958.
The current reinforced concrete building was completed in 1982.