| Kenkun Shrine, also known as Takeisao Shrine, is a [[Shinto shrine]] on [[Funaoka-yama]] in [[Kyoto]], dedicated to the spirit of [[Oda Nobunaga]]. His ''[[kamon]]'' (clan crest) appears in numerous places around the shrine grounds. | | Kenkun Shrine, also known as Takeisao Shrine, is a [[Shinto shrine]] on [[Funaoka-yama]] in [[Kyoto]], dedicated to the spirit of [[Oda Nobunaga]]. His ''[[kamon]]'' (clan crest) appears in numerous places around the shrine grounds. |
− | The shrine was established by [[Emperor Meiji]] in [[1869]], who at that time declared Nobunaga a ''[[kami]]'' under the name Kenkun or Takeisao. The shrine was moved to its current site atop the hill in [[1875]]. Funaoka-yama had served as the marker for North in classical [[Heian-kyo|Heian-kyô]], and following the [[Honnoji Incident|Honnôji Incident]] of [[1582]], [[Toyotomi Hideyoshi]], with the permission of [[Emperor Ogimachi|Emperor Ôgimachi]], established Funaoka as a gravesite for Nobunaga. | + | The shrine was established by [[Emperor Meiji]] in [[1869]], who at that time declared Nobunaga a ''[[kami]]'' under the name Kenkun or Takeisao, asserting that by reuniting and pacifying the realm after a century of [[Sengoku Period|civil war]], Nobunaga had been doing a service to the Imperial state.<ref name=fuji>Takashi Fujitani, ''Splendid Monarchy'', University of California Press (1996), 89-90.</ref> The shrine was moved to its current site atop the hill in [[1875]], and was officially completed in [[1880]], alongside two shrines dedicated to [[Toyotomi Hideyoshi]], in Kyoto and Osaka.<ref name=fuji/> Funaoka-yama had served as the marker for North in classical [[Heian-kyo|Heian-kyô]], and following the [[Honnoji Incident|Honnôji Incident]] of [[1582]], [[Toyotomi Hideyoshi]], with the permission of [[Emperor Ogimachi|Emperor Ôgimachi]], established Funaoka as a gravesite for Nobunaga. |
| The shrine holds a number of treasures in its collection related to Nobunaga, including one of Nobunaga's suits of armor, a sword used by [[Imagawa Yoshimoto]] at the [[battle of Okehazama]], and an autographed manuscript copy of [[Ota Gyuichi|Ôta Gyûichi's]] biography of Nobunaga. | | The shrine holds a number of treasures in its collection related to Nobunaga, including one of Nobunaga's suits of armor, a sword used by [[Imagawa Yoshimoto]] at the [[battle of Okehazama]], and an autographed manuscript copy of [[Ota Gyuichi|Ôta Gyûichi's]] biography of Nobunaga. |