Difference between revisions of "Kume Tenpi-gu"
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*''Japanese'': 天妃宮 ''(Tenpi-guu)'' | *''Japanese'': 天妃宮 ''(Tenpi-guu)'' | ||
− | [[Kumemura]], the [[Ryukyu Kingdom|Ryûkyû Kingdom's]] center of Chinese learning, had two shrines to [[Tenpi]] (aka Mazu), a [[Taoist]] goddess of the sea. The two shrines, called Upper (''Kami'') and Lower (''Shimo'') Tenpi-gû, are believed to have been built during the reign of the [[Yongle Emperor]], in [[1424]],<ref>Pamphlet available at Kume-[[Shiseibyo]].</ref> within the first decades after the establishment of the town. | + | [[Kumemura]], the [[Ryukyu Kingdom|Ryûkyû Kingdom's]] center of Chinese learning, had two shrines to [[Tenpi]] (aka Mazu), a [[Taoist]] goddess of the sea. The two shrines, called Upper (''Kami'') and Lower (''Shimo'') Tenpi-gû, are believed to have been built during the reign of the [[Yongle Emperor]], in [[1424]],<ref>Pamphlet available at Kume-[[Shiseibyo]].</ref> within the first decades after the establishment of the town. Their first objects of worship, statues of the goddess, are said to have been brought to Ryûkyû by the original [[36 Min families]] who founded Kumemura.<ref>Plaque at the former site of the Shimo Tenpi-gu.[https://www.flickr.com/photos/toranosuke/21257376353/sizes/k/]</ref> |
Ryukyuan sailors prayed to Tenpi for safe travels at sea, often carrying statues of the goddess onboard their ships, and offering the statues to the shrine upon their safe return. | Ryukyuan sailors prayed to Tenpi for safe travels at sea, often carrying statues of the goddess onboard their ships, and offering the statues to the shrine upon their safe return. | ||
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The Upper Shrine was the center of elite education in the kingdom until the establishment in [[1718]] of the Meirindô at the [[Shiseibyo|Shiseibyô]].<ref>Gallery labels, "Kuninda - Ryûkyû to Chûgoku no kakehashi," special exhibit, Okinawa Prefectural Museum, Sept 2014.</ref> The stone gate of Kami Tenpi Shrine survives today, attached to the Tenpi Elementary School built on the former site of the shrine. The construction style of the gate indicates a transition at that time (in the early 15th century) from the ''aikata-zumi'' style of stone construction to the ''nuno-zumi'' style. | The Upper Shrine was the center of elite education in the kingdom until the establishment in [[1718]] of the Meirindô at the [[Shiseibyo|Shiseibyô]].<ref>Gallery labels, "Kuninda - Ryûkyû to Chûgoku no kakehashi," special exhibit, Okinawa Prefectural Museum, Sept 2014.</ref> The stone gate of Kami Tenpi Shrine survives today, attached to the Tenpi Elementary School built on the former site of the shrine. The construction style of the gate indicates a transition at that time (in the early 15th century) from the ''aikata-zumi'' style of stone construction to the ''nuno-zumi'' style. | ||
− | The grounds of the Lower Shrine became the site of the first Okinawa | + | The grounds of the Lower Shrine, along with the neighboring offices of the [[Naha satonushi]], became the site of the first Okinawa Elementary Normal School in [[1880]]/6, and later the Prefectural Normal School, and then in [[1886]] a post office. The objects of worship from the Lower Shrine were first moved to the Upper Shrine, but when Tenpi Elementary School was established on the grounds of the Upper Shrine in [[1889]], the images of Tenpi which had been the objects of worship at both shrines were moved to the Tensonbyô, a different Taoist shrine in the area, which was later incorporated into the Shiseibyô, Kumemura's Confucian Shrine.<ref>Plaques on-site in Kume district, Naha.[https://www.flickr.com/photos/toranosuke/9526940777/sizes/k/]</ref> |
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 00:39, 19 October 2015
- Established: 1424
- Other Names: 天妃廟 (Tenpi-byou)
- Japanese: 天妃宮 (Tenpi-guu)
Kumemura, the Ryûkyû Kingdom's center of Chinese learning, had two shrines to Tenpi (aka Mazu), a Taoist goddess of the sea. The two shrines, called Upper (Kami) and Lower (Shimo) Tenpi-gû, are believed to have been built during the reign of the Yongle Emperor, in 1424,[1] within the first decades after the establishment of the town. Their first objects of worship, statues of the goddess, are said to have been brought to Ryûkyû by the original 36 Min families who founded Kumemura.[2]
Ryukyuan sailors prayed to Tenpi for safe travels at sea, often carrying statues of the goddess onboard their ships, and offering the statues to the shrine upon their safe return.
The Upper Shrine was the center of elite education in the kingdom until the establishment in 1718 of the Meirindô at the Shiseibyô.[3] The stone gate of Kami Tenpi Shrine survives today, attached to the Tenpi Elementary School built on the former site of the shrine. The construction style of the gate indicates a transition at that time (in the early 15th century) from the aikata-zumi style of stone construction to the nuno-zumi style.
The grounds of the Lower Shrine, along with the neighboring offices of the Naha satonushi, became the site of the first Okinawa Elementary Normal School in 1880/6, and later the Prefectural Normal School, and then in 1886 a post office. The objects of worship from the Lower Shrine were first moved to the Upper Shrine, but when Tenpi Elementary School was established on the grounds of the Upper Shrine in 1889, the images of Tenpi which had been the objects of worship at both shrines were moved to the Tensonbyô, a different Taoist shrine in the area, which was later incorporated into the Shiseibyô, Kumemura's Confucian Shrine.[4]
References
- Plaques on-site.
- "Tenpi-byô." Okinawa Compact Encyclopedia 沖縄コンパクト事典, Ryukyu Shimpo, 1 March 2003.