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The Yushima Seidô is a [[Confucian shrine]] located in [[Tokyo]].
 
The Yushima Seidô is a [[Confucian shrine]] located in [[Tokyo]].
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The shrine traces its history to a Confucian shrine called Senseiden, established by [[Hayashi Razan]] in [[1632]] in Shinobu-ga-oka (today, [[Ueno Park]]). Shogun [[Tokugawa Tsunayoshi]] renamed the structure the Taiseiden, and the shrine complex "Seidô," as he removed the shrine to Ochanomizu in [[1691]]. Some of the buildings were repainted vermillion, with blue and green highlights, at that time.
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The shrine traces its history to a Confucian shrine called Senseiden, established by [[Hayashi Razan]] in [[1632]] at the request of lord of [[Owari han]],[[Tokugawa Yoshinao]], in Shinobu-ga-oka (today, [[Ueno Park]]). Shogun [[Tokugawa Tsunayoshi]] renamed the structure the Taiseiden, and the shrine complex "Seidô," as he removed the shrine to Ochanomizu in [[1691]]. Some of the buildings were repainted vermillion, with blue and green highlights, at that time.
    
Meanwhile, the [[Hayashi clan]]'s [[Shoheizaka gakumonjo|Shôheizaka gakumonjo]] academy was moved onto the grounds of the shrine, and came to be housed in the Taiseiden.
 
Meanwhile, the [[Hayashi clan]]'s [[Shoheizaka gakumonjo|Shôheizaka gakumonjo]] academy was moved onto the grounds of the shrine, and came to be housed in the Taiseiden.
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The shrine was named a national historical landmark in 1922, but was destroyed in the Great Kantô Earthquake the following year. It was rebuilt in 1935, in steel-reinforced-concrete, instead of in wood, and painted in black, inside and out. The roof was done in the ''[[irimoya]]'' style, with bronze ornaments. The world's largest statue of [[Confucius]], a 1975 gift from the Taipei Lions Club, stands on the grounds.
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The shrine grounds were made a university in the [[Meiji period]], and the statues of [[Confucius]] and others were taken down, but the site, and the statues, were later restored. The shrine was then named a national historical landmark in 1922, but it was destroyed in the Great Kantô Earthquake the following year. It was rebuilt in 1935, in steel-reinforced-concrete, instead of in wood, and painted in black, inside and out. The roof was done in the ''[[irimoya]]'' style, with bronze ornaments. The world's largest statue of Confucius, a 1975 gift from the Taipei Lions Club, stands on the grounds.
    
==References==
 
==References==
 
*"[http://kotobank.jp/word/%E6%B9%AF%E5%B3%B6%E8%81%96%E5%A0%82 Yushima seidô]." ''Koku shitei shiseki kanzen guide no kaisetsu'' 国指定史跡完全ガイドの解説, Kodansha, 2013.
 
*"[http://kotobank.jp/word/%E6%B9%AF%E5%B3%B6%E8%81%96%E5%A0%82 Yushima seidô]." ''Koku shitei shiseki kanzen guide no kaisetsu'' 国指定史跡完全ガイドの解説, Kodansha, 2013.
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*Plaques on-site.
    
==External Links==
 
==External Links==
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