Takebe taisha
Takebe Shrine is a Shinto shrine located in the city of Ōtsu, Shiga Prefecture, Japan. It is the ichinomiya of former Ōmi Province. The main kami enshrined are Ōkuninushi and Yamato Takeru. The shrine's main festival is held annually on April 15.
Enshrined ''kami''
The kami enshrined at Takebe Taisha are:- Yamato Takeru, folk hero and the son of Emperor Keikō
- Ōkuninushi, the god of nation-building, agriculture, medicine, and protective magic
History
When Minamoto no Yoritomo was sent to exile in Izu following the defeat of the Genji clan in the Heiji Rebellion, he stopped to pray for the revival of the Genji at this shrine. In 1190, when the Heike clan was overthrown, he again prayed at this shrine in thanksgiving, and the shrine became a popular pilgrimage destination for good fortune. The shrine was rebuilt in 1233 by Kujō Yoritsune.
- 1233 : Kujō Yoritsune completely rebuilt the structures of the shrine. In 1868, when Emperor Meiji made his first visit to Edo, he dispatched an emissary to the shrine with a heikaku for the kami.
In 1948 the shrine's name was officially changed to "Takebe Taisha".
The shrine is 15 minutes on foot from Karahashimae Station on the Keihan Electric Railway Ishiyama Sakamoto Line.
Cultural Properties
Important Cultural Properties
- Tōrō stone lantern, Kamakura period.
- Wooden Statue of a Female DeityHeian period; set of two